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Welcome to the IAFF Frontline News Brief, distributed
twice a month to IAFF affiliate leaders and IAFF
members. We encourage you to forward this news to your
members and others in the fire service.
The Frontline News Brief is delivered directly by email
and is also published on the IAFF web site. You can view
past issues at
http://daily.iaff.org/frontline/morenews.html.
Your feedback is also welcome - email
pr@iaff.org with questions and
comments.
"IAFF Wins Passage of HELPS Retirees Bill"
(International Association of Fire
Fighters)
"Pension Threats Hit Providence"
(International Association of Fire Fighters)
"Busy But Not Happy" (Sun News)
"Firefighters' union buys morning on radio show"
(The Tribune-Star )
"Union fights city's appeal of contract"
(Philadelphia News)
"9/11 Dust May Have Aged Rescuers' Lungs Early"
(Boston Globe)
"Union Leaders Discuss Possible City-Wide Strike"
(WNED-AM 970 News)
"New Online Jobaid Helps IAFF Affiliates Understand GASB
45 " (International Association of
Fire Fighters)
"IAFF Talks About Global Alliance With Other Fire
Unions" (International Association of
Fire Fighters )
"Austin mulls extending bilingual stipend to all city
workers" (American-Statesman)
"Cities' Disaster Plans Lacking" (USA
Today)
"Locals get sneak peak at 9/11 flick"
(Daily News)
"Firehouse Meals Made Easy!"
(International Association of Fire Fighters)
"More Women Joining Ranks of Firefighters"
(Pittsburgh Tribune-Review)
"Firefighters Burn Over Proposed District Dissolution"
(Trenton Times (NJ)
"House Bills Target Broader Emergency Communications"
(TelecomWeb)
"Detroit Local Wins Court Favor on Public Safety"
(International Association of Fire
Fighters)
"Firefighting mountain biker wins gold medal"
(Union Democrat)
"IAFF Announces Winners in 2006 Media Awards Contest!"
(International Association of Fire
Fighters )
"New Technology Helps Firefighters Stay Cool"
(WTKR (VA)
"Frontline News Brief" is
Sponsored By:
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MDA gives special recognition and
credit to all the hard-working,
supportive and enthusiastic men and
women of the IAFF across the United
States and Canada for their
overwhelming support for MDA.
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IAFF Wins
Passage of HELPS Retirees Bill
International Association of Fire Fighters (08/04/06)
The IAFF has won an unprecedented congressional victory
in the successful passage of its HELPS retiree health
care proposal and the elimination of early withdraw
penalties from Deferred Retirement Option Program (DROP)
accounts. Both proposals have been top IAFF legislative
priorities this year.
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
Pension
Threats Hit Providence
International Association of Fire Fighters (08/04/06)
A recently unveiled plan to eliminate defined benefit
pension plans in favor of a defined contribution pension
plan for city of Providence, Rhode Island employees --
including fire fighters -- is one of many threatening
fire fighters across the United States.
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
Busy But
Not Happy
Sun News (07/27/2006); Prendergast, Ken
Cleveland, OH Local 93 reports that last year was the
busiest year in the city fire department's history. Fire
fighters answered 65,825 calls for assistance, a 17
percent rise over 2004's 56,236 answers. The 2005 figure
surpassed the prior record, set six years ago, in which
there were 56,316 answers. Among the largest gains in
calls for assistance were for non-fire emergencies,
including car accidents, gas leaks, bomb threats and
industrial rescues, which rose 40 percent from 2004. The
amount of structural fires rose by 15 percent. Local 93
authorities said that the larger workload was taken care
of by a smaller fire department. Cleveland officials
laid off 70 fire fighters in January 2004 and reduced
the number of active fire companies from 44 to 40.
"Cutting or not providing adequate resources at a time
when citizens need our services more than ever cannot
continue," the union noted in a statement.
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
Firefighters' union buys morning on radio show
The Tribune-Star (08/04/06); Greninger, Howard
Terre Haute, IN Local 758
placed the winning bid of $1,725 to name and co-host
rights to an August 15 morning radio show.The station,
B-102.7, put its morning show, "The Morning Buzz," on
sale on eBay. Hearing rumors that the station was for
sale, hosts Chris Carter and Doug Edge decided to
auction off their morning show for a day. Fire Captain
Darrick Scott -- also a Vigo County
council member -- said Local 758 will rename the morning
show, "102.7 The Blaze." "We thought it would be good
public relations for us, and allow the public a chance
to know about us. We want to promote safety and get our
views across," Scott said. "We also plan to kick off our
MDA boot-a-thon and contributions for the
United Way. " Terre Haute
Local 758 approved a no-confidence vote against Fire
Department Chief Jay Utz last month. The 97-8 vote came
because of the union's concerns regarding Utz's
decisions as fire chief, said Michael
Morrison, president of Local 758. He says the union will
use the air time to get its points across regarding
staffing and other fire department issues, but also made
it very clear that they really want to have fun with
this and educate people about their job and what they do
in the community.
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
Union
fights city's appeal of contract
Philadelphia News (08/01/06); McDonald, Mark
Brian McBride, president of Philadelphia, PA Local 22,
promised to "use every means at our disposal" to
oppose Mayor John Street administration's appeal of an
arbitration award that gave 2,400 fire fighters a
three-year contract and a 10 percent pay raise. "The
city has shown blatant disrespect for the arbitration
process by appealing the award," he said. "The city is
fighting provisions that will keep citizens safe and
fire fighters healthy." One provision requires the city
to vent toxic diesel fumes from inside firehouses . "
The city's decision to appeal is mean-spirited and a
slap in the face to fire fighters," he said.
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
9/11 Dust
May Have Aged Rescuers' Lungs Early
Boston Globe (08/02/06); Larkin, Catherine
An article in the American Journal of Respiratory and
Critical Care Medicine indicates that New York City fire
fighters and paramedics' lungs may have aged an average
of 12 years following exposure to the dust and smoke at
the World Trade Center collapse site in 2001. Those
arriving first on the scene have had more frequent and
severe instances of wheezing and chest pain than
those who arrived two days later, for instance. The
study noted that exposure to the dust and smoke could
have put them at risk for developing chronic breathing
problems and lung function loss. Only 22 percent of the
responders in 2001 used protective masks and breathing
equipment, and a lack of adequate equipment led to
compliance problems and, ultimately, the ailments many
fire fighters and other rescuers are experiencing.
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
Union
Leaders Discuss Possible City-Wide Strike
WNED-AM 970 News (08/03/06); Caya, Chris
Buffalo, NY Local 282 President Joe Foley met
with leaders of the police union and the teacher's union
to discuss a possible city-wide strike. Mayor Byron
Brown has promised to lift the city's wage freeze, but
Foley says he's not sure how much longer union members
will wait. "I have been without a contract and a pay
raise for five years...I am past the breaking point,"
Foley said. It is illegal in
New York state for public
employee unions to strike under the Taylor Law.
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
New Online
Jobaid Helps IAFF Affiliates Understand GASB 45
International Association of Fire Fighters (08/09/06)
IAFF affiliates and members need to be aware of the new
U.S. Governmental Accounting Standards Board (GASB)
Statement 45 (GASB 45) and its effect on health care and
other non-pension benefits for retired public sector
employees, including fire fighters and emergency medical
personnel. The IAFF urges its affiliates to become
involved in the decision-making process for any changes
local and state governments propose as a result of GASB
45 and to be prepared to discuss with employers
solutions and alternatives to any cost-cutting measures
that jeopardize retirement benefits.
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
IAFF Talks
About Global Alliance With Other Fire Unions
International Association of Fire Fighters (07/28/06)
A delegation led by IAFF General President Harold
Schaitberger met with representatives from the Fire
Brigades Union (FBU) of the United Kingdom; the United
Firefighters Union of Australia (UFUA); and the New
Zealand Professional Firefighters Union (NZPFU) July
25-27 in Hawaii, to begin discussions and set parameters
for an information sharing process that could develop
into a powerful global alliance, after the unions
involved take the information they learned at the
meetings to their respective memberships for review and
consideration.
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
Austin
mulls extending bilingual stipend to all city workers
American-Statesman (08/03/06); Alexander, Kate
In Austin, Texas, fire fighters and other emergency
responders receive additional compensation for speaking
languages other than English. The City Council is
considering a proposal to expand the bilingual stipend
to all eligible city employees. An estimated 600 people
in jobs where speaking Spanish is critical to
communicating with the public have been identified as
eligible for the $150 monthly stipend, which would begin
in January and cost $650,000 for the remainder of the
fiscal year. Encouraging bilingual workers is a key part
of responding to the changing demographics of the city,
where about one-third of the population is Hispanic. For
police, the stipend is available for American Sign
Language, French and Korean. In the Fire Department and
Emergency Medical Services, the benefit is limited to
those who speak Spanish and is given to 13.5 percent of
fire fighters and 6 percent of paramedics. Several other
Texas cities
offer a similar stipend. Dallas started the stipend in 1987 and now
offers up to $100 monthly to employees who prove
proficient in Spanish, Cambodian, Cantonese, Kurdish,
Korean, Laotian, Thai or Vietnamese. Council Member Mike
Martinez, formerly an Austin fire fighter and president
of Austin Local 975, said Austin can only benefit from employing more
people able to communicate with non-English speakers.
"It improves service and makes the city more accessible
for its constituents." He added that Local 975 recently
offered a Spanish-language course that drew 120 fire
fighters. "Many more had to be turned away," he said.
"They just saw how much of a better service you could
provide when you could communicate."
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
Cities'
Disaster Plans Lacking
USA Today (07/26/06) P. 1A; Hall, Mimi
A new survey of 183 cities by the U.S. Conference of
Mayors finds that 44 percent of the cities surveyed have
not created or updated evacuation plans since the Gulf
Coast was pounded by Hurricane Katrina nearly a year
ago. In addition, nearly five years since the September
11 terrorist attacks, a whopping 80 percent of cities
polled say that their first responders are unable to
communicate with each other or with nearby
jurisdictions. In addition, about 75 percent of the
cities surveyed say they are not ready for a flu
pandemic. The survey, released July 26, finds that most
cities lack the funding to purchase communications
equipment that would allow fire fighters, police and
other first responders to communicate with each other.
The survey examines cities in 38 states, with
populations ranging from 30,000 to 8 million. Dearborn,
Michigan Mayor Michael Guido, chief of the mayors'
group, says that cities must take more initiative on
disaster planning by making plans to share equipment
during crises, signing mutual-aid agreements with local
towns and forming agreements with disaster-response
companies before a disaster strikes.
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
Locals
get sneak peak at 9/11 flick
Daily News (08/03/06); Halliday, Ryan J.
Dedham, MA Local 1735 fire fighters got a sneak peak of
"World Trade Center," Oliver Stone's 9/11 movie about
the heroic efforts to save two Port Authority police
officers trapped in the Ground Zero wreckage. The film
documents the heroic rescue efforts by fire fighters,
Marines and EMTs to find the men -- two of only 20
people pulled from the wreckage alive. Among the first
responders who attended the screening was Robert
McCarthy, president of the Professional Fire Fighters of
Massachusetts, one of the thousands of fire fighters,
police and EMTs who assisted at Ground Zero. He said he
was not sure if he was ready to see a 9/11 film, but
that he was encouraged to learn that the filmmakers had
the support and blessing of victims' families. "It's
something that we don't want anyone to forget," McCarthy
said. "It's a part of our history." John "Spike"
Lawless, a retired Cambridge fire fighter who worked for three weeks at the
World
Trade Center wreckage, said he knew seeing the
images of Ground Zero on the big screen was "going to
create a certain amount of emotion." Lawless, a past
district vice president emeritus of the Professional
Fire Fighters of Massachusetts, said his time at Ground
Zero was more difficult than his one-year tour in
Vietnam as a Marine.
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
Firehouse
Meals Made Easy!
International Association of Fire Fighters (08/07/06)
Fit to Survive, the International Association of Fire
Fighters' online guide to health and nutrition, now
offers an exciting new meal planner featuring simple,
healthy meals that fire fighters can prepare on the job.
This valuable new tool provides nutritious breakfast,
lunch, snack and dinner menus based on a 2,200-calorie
diet.
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
More
Women Joining Ranks of Firefighters
Pittsburgh Tribune-Review (07/30/06); Leone, Emily
More women are becoming fire fighters. Women in the Fire
Service, which fosters and backs female fire fighters,
reports there were more than 5,800 professional women
fire fighters in action last year. Rebecca McDowell has
been a fire fighter for Uniontown, PA Local 955 for a
little more than a year. She says fire fighting is a
great job.
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
Firefighters Burn Over Proposed District Dissolution
Trenton Times (NJ) (07/28/06); Rich, Lisa
Washington Township, New Jersey, is holding hearings on
whether the township's independent fire district should
be dissolved, returning fire fighting operations to
township government. Fire fighters attending the
hearings strongly protested the proposal, arguing that
it would reduce the department's ability to provide
effective fire protection to the community. However, the
township's mayor, David Fried, is concerned that the
fire district is not accountable to the government for
its spending, and that dissolving it would allow the
township to reduce property taxes. Fire fighters counter
that the township has not given the district enough time
to respond to its concerns about spending and
accountability, and that these problems could be solved
without dissolving the district.
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
House
Bills Target Broader Emergency Communications
TelecomWeb (07/24/06)
An emergency-alert system that voluntarily enlists
traditional television and radio networks -- as well as
service providers of Internet email and instant
messaging, wireless voice and text messages, BlackBerry
server systems and cable communications -- is the
centerpiece of two separate proposals, the Warning,
Alert, and Response Network Act and the 21st Century
Emergency Communications Act, currently under
examination in the House of Representatives. The bills'
consideration comes at a point where the Department of
Homeland Security, the Association of Public Television
Stations, the Federal Emergency Management Agency and
wireline, wireless, and cable community members are
testing multimedia alert technologies that tap common
traits of digital television, digital paging and IP
network transmissions. "With nearly 200 million
Americans carrying cell phones and other wireless
devices, it seems only natural to also look to the
wireless industry to help communicate in times of
emergencies," said House Energy and Commerce
Subcommittee on Telecommunications and the Internet
Chair and Representative Fred Upton (R-MI). The
legislation appears to be partially driven by the
shortcomings of public alert communications systems
exposed by the Hurricane Katrina disaster. The Warning,
Alert, and Response Network Act includes no restrictions
on available technology usage, a promise not to choose
or dictate communications-alert media and an allocation
of $106 million to broaden the alert network and help
coordinate various federal initiatives to enhance the
system. Meanwhile, the 21st Century Emergency
Communications Act would facilitate the creation of
interoperable emergency communications standards, ban
the expenditure of homeland security funding on
equipment that does not conform with standards and
statewide compatible communications strategies and set
up a new Office of Emergency Communications.
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
Detroit
Local Wins Court Favor on Public Safety
International Association of Fire Fighters (08/08/06)
A Michigan Court of Appeals has released its opinion
that the City of Detroit must investigate and negotiate
in arbitration the impact on public safety when
considering fire department reductions. "This is a great
victory for our members," says Dan McNamara, president
of Detroit, MI Local 344. "The city can no longer layoff
fire fighters or close fire stations with impunity. They
must consider the impact of their actions on public
safety."
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
Firefighting mountain biker wins gold medal
Union Democrat (07/27/06); Parkinson, Cameron
California Department of Forestry (CDF) Local 2881 fire
fighter Bruce Lodge has won a gold medal in the
40-and-over age group in the 35th annual California
Firefighter Summer Olympic Games in Santa Clara County.
Lodge, 48, competed in the same event in 2004 and was
not happy with the result. " I was thoroughly
embarrassed," he said. "I'm not sure where I finished,
but it was quite a poor effort." That was one of his
goals this year, to come back and have a much better
performance. Lodge competed in three mountain bike
races leading up to this year's games. He trains on U.S.
Forest Service and logging roads and also has a
stationary bike at work. Stationed in Arnold,
California, Lodge likes the difficult and
often-dangerous job and says he wouldn't think of doing
anything else. "The physical demands of the job have
been motivation for my cycling activity, and the cycling
has provided the physical activity needed for the
job," he said. The California Firefighter Summer Olympic
Games have been held since 1970, with 29 individual and
team sports governed by the California Firemen's
Athletic Association.
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
IAFF
Announces Winners in 2006 Media Awards Contest!
International Association of Fire Fighters (08/01/06)
The IAFF has announced the winners in the 2006 Media
Awards Contest, conducted annually to honor reporting
and photography that best portray the professional and
dangerous work of fire fighters and emergency medical
personnel in the United States and Canada.
(Web Link)
Return to Headlines
New
Technology Helps Firefighters Stay Cool
WTKR (VA); Straeten, Sara
The recent heat wave has been tough on fire fighters,
who are required to wear insulated gear that further
boosts their body temperature. Fire fighters in James
City County, VA Local 3306 are using a new technology to
help them cope with the warm weather. After rotating
out, fire fighters take off their gear and slip into
"cool shirts." Ice water is pumped through tubes
connecting these thin, blue vests to a cooler, lowering
their body temperature without making them wet. More
frequent rotations, cooling fans and a truck stocked
with water are also used to help fire fighters keep
cool.
(Web Link)
Return to
Headlines
©
copyright 2006 International Association of Fire
Fighters
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