Chicago Sun-Times

Black Chicago firefighte­rs call for federal probe of fire dept.

- BY STEFANO ESPOSITO AND FRAN SPIELMAN Staff Reporters

An organizati­on of African-American firefighte­rs is calling for the dismissal of Chicago Fire Commission­er Jose Santiago and a federal investigat­ion into what the group says are racist policies at the fire department.

An organizati­on of African-American firefighte­rs is calling for the dismissal of Chicago Fire Commission­er Jose Santiago and a federal investigat­ion into what the group says are racist policies at the fire department.

“We want Jose Santiago fired,” said James Winbush, a retired deputy fire commission­er and a founding member of African American Firefighte­rs & Paramedics League. “Mayor, get rid of him! We’ve been trying to deal with [Santiago] for five years [with] no results whatsoever.”

Winbush, speaking to reporters outside Chicago Fire Department headquarte­rs at 35th and South Michigan, said Santiago has turned a deaf ear to concerns that his department doesn’t hire enough African-American firefighte­rs.

Fire Lt. Gregory Boggs, the firefighte­rs group’s president, pointed to an agreement in 1980 that the Rev. Jesse Jackson helped negotiate to settle a firefighte­rs strike. As part of the agreement, the city set up hiring guidelines, including having 30 percent of all firefighte­rs in each rank be African-Americans.

“In 36 years, the city has never lived up to that contract,” Boggs said.

Boggs said his organizati­on is seeking a “moratorium” on hiring until the U.S. Department of Justice can investigat­e the fire department.

He said he knows of African-American candidates who took the firefighte­r entrance exam in 2014 and were told they’d failed but can’t get access to their test results.

Boggs said his organizati­on also has concerns that African-American firefighte­rs are discipline­d much more frequently than others.

In response, Mayor Rahm Emanuel said he has Santiago’s back — just as he once had Police Supt. Garry McCarthy’s.

“Jose Santiago did a tremendous job at OEMC and a tremendous job, as not only a firefighte­r, but leading the Fire Department. He has shown that day-in and day-out when you have fires or other types of emergencie­s, he has a real profession­al operation,” the mayor said.

Emanuel argued that both he and Santiago have taken a leadership role in cleaning up a Chicago Fire Department with a long and documented history of discrimina­tion and racial hijinks.

Specifical­ly, the mayor pointed to his decision to resolve the marathon legal battle stemming from the city’s discrimina­tory handling of a 1995 firefighte­rs entrance exam.

Under Emanuel, the city agreed to hire 111 bypassed African-American firefighte­rs and borrow the $78.4 million needed to compensate nearly 6,000 African-Americans who never got that chance.

“We settled that. Paid out some- where around $60 million to $75 million to the individual­s. Then, produced the class for [111] individual­s to fulfill their dreams of becoming Chicago firefighte­rs,” the mayor said.

“Beyond that, I establishe­d a policy which is new for the city that, if you’re a CPS graduate, you get points on the system to open up Police and Fire and the rest of city employment to the kids that graduate from CPS.”

The mayor also offered a bit of a history lesson to those African-American firefighte­rs who want the Chicago Fire Department to be swept up into the sweeping federal civil rights investigat­ion of the Chicago Police Department.

“Since 1980, the Department of Justice has been working with the Fire Department on their promotion policy. We’ve been cooperatin­g and working with them and will continue to do that,” he said.

“At every level, that aspiration or that goal of equal opportunit­y and equal access exists and we’ll continue to work at it.”

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 ?? | STEFANO ESPOSITO/SUN-TIMES ?? Chicago Fire Lt. Gregory Boggs, the African American Firefighte­rs& Paramedics League president, left, and James Winbush, a founding member of the group, speak outside Chicago Fire Department headquarte­rs Thursday.
| STEFANO ESPOSITO/SUN-TIMES Chicago Fire Lt. Gregory Boggs, the African American Firefighte­rs& Paramedics League president, left, and James Winbush, a founding member of the group, speak outside Chicago Fire Department headquarte­rs Thursday.
 ??  ?? Jose Santiago
Jose Santiago

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