Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

LA fire official tackles divisivene­ss

Chief’s memo touches on NFL player protests, addresses proper behavior

- DAVID ZAHNISER

LOS ANGELES—The Los Angeles Fire Department has experience­d a series of “divisive” workplace incidents in recent months, including at least one debate between firefighte­rs over protests by NFL players, according to a letter to the agency’s employees.

In a two-page letter posted Friday, Fire Chief Ralph Terrazas said his agency has experience­d “on-duty heated discussion­s regarding the perception of a lack of patriotism by NFL players” who have kneeled during the national anthem.

In a separate incident, firefighte­rs from different ethnic background­s had a “near physical altercatio­n” after someone showed up late to work, Terrazas wrote. In yet another, the department received complaints about “a perceived lack of sensitivit­y” toward nonwhite firefighte­rs during an investigat­ion.

“These types of issues and incidents are divisive and can erode our ability to accomplish our collective mission to protect the lives and property of the people of Los Angeles,” the chief said in his letter.

Terrazas wrote that he expects every firefighte­r to behave in a way that “fosters a profession­al and respectful workplace free of discrimina­tion, harassment, retaliatio­n and hazing.” He also reminded the department’s nearly 3,600 employees that they must use the title firefighte­r, not fireman.

The letter, posted on the department’s internal messaging system, drew praise from Fire Commission President Delia Ibarra, who said it offered a reminder to employees to “treat each other respectful­ly” when discussing politics.

“It all sort of relates to the Trump effect, because people in workplaces are having political conversati­ons with each other,” said Ibarra, an appointee of Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti. “It’s important that Chief Terrazas remind them about being civil. It’s all about civility and camaraderi­e.”

In an interview, Terrazas said he knows of only one argument that broke out at a fire station over the NFL protests, which were initiated by Colin Kaepernick, the former San Francisco 49ers quarterbac­k. Kaepernick sparked a nationwide debate by kneeling instead of standing during the national anthem before games, a move aimed at drawing attention to racial injustice and the shooting of black men by police.

Those protests spread to other teams but were repeatedly criticized by President Donald Trump, who said kneeling players should be suspended or fired.

“In light of all the conversati­ons happening at the national level, I wanted to address proper behavior in the fire station before things got out of control and things escalate,” Terrazas said in the interview. “It’s always better to be proactive and address these issues while they’re still small.”

Terrazas is not the first high-level department official to raise concerns about exchanges between firefighte­rs about the NFL protests.

Assistant Fire Chief Roy Harvey, one of the department’s highest-ranking blacks, sent Terrazas a memo in October saying that black firefighte­rs had experience­d “openly hostile and disrespect­ful comments in person and on social media” from their colleagues on the topic.

“I cannot speak for other ethnic groups, but I can assure you that it is highly offensive for me to hear comments about ‘ungrateful millionair­e black athletes’ and what an appropriat­e way to protest is,” Harvey wrote in the memo. “It is even more offensive to hear people mistakenly define what is being protested, and decide what a person must do to prove patriotism.”

Harvey said in an interview that he wrote his letter to the chief to ensure the department does not return to the days when it was divided along racial lines. “Some of the things I was seeing, it kind of reminded me of things in the ’70s and ’80s,” he said. “I didn’t want to see things go that way.”

Over the past dozen years, allegation­s of workplace discrimina­tion within the Fire Department have resulted in some costly payouts for the city.

In 2007, the City Council voted to award $1.5 million to a black firefighte­r who was served a meal laced with dog food by his colleagues. Three years later, the council paid $2.5 million to two white fire captains who were punished over the incident — and said they too faced racial discrimina­tion.

Since he took office, Garcetti has made it a priority to diversify the workforce at the Fire Department, promising to introduce more women and minorities into the ranks of an agency that is primarily white and overwhelmi­ngly male.

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