Chicago Sun-Times

Mom of slain teen named Fire Dept.’s 1st deputy cmsr.

- BY MAUDLYNE IHEJIRIKA, STAFF REPORTER mihejirika@suntimes.com | @maudlynei

Firefighte­r Annette Holt, who lost her teenage son in one of the most tragic incidents of gun violence in Chicago history, has been named first deputy commission­er of the Chicago Fire Department — the first woman to hold that position.

Holt is the mother of Blair Holt, the 16-year-old Julian High School honor student who was killed on a CTA bus in 2007, trying to shield a friend after a gang member opened fire at a rival gang member on a bus after school.

Originally sentenced to 100 years in the killing, Michael Pace was resentence­d in January to 75 years. Holt and Blair’s father, retired Chicago Police Cmdr. Ronald Holt, have dedicated themselves to fighting gun violence ever since.

“First Deputy Annette Nance-Holt is one of the most efficient officers I have had the pleasure of working with,” Fire Department Commission­er Richard C. Ford told the Sun Times Thursday. “She is an outstandin­g tactician and administra­tor. Her abilities and leadership are respected by both officers and the rank and file.”

The appointmen­t to the department’s No. 2 position — no woman has held that or the top position of commission­er in the department’s 160-year history — was quietly made by Ford, himself appointed late last month by outgoing Mayor Rahm Emanuel to replace retired Commission­er Jose Santiago.

Ford and Holt, both AfricanAme­rican, now lead — though perhaps temporaril­y until the mayoral election — a department historical­ly challenged by race and sex discrimina­tion complaints.

Holt, a 28-year veteran of the department, was out of town and unavailabl­e for comment Thursday, a Fire Department spokesman said.

She joined the department in 1990 — four years after the very first female firefighte­rs were hired in November 1986, following charges of discrimina­tion. She was promoted to lieutenant of the Fire Prevention Bureau in 1993, and then to lieutenant Emergency Medical Technician in Fire Suppressio­n & Rescue, in 1995, a position she held until 2001.

From 2001 to 2014, she moved from the rank of lieutenant EMT in the Training Division to captain EMT in Fire Suppressio­n & Rescue, during that time also serving as a federal monitor in the consent decree of the Lewis classactio­n suit that led to the hiring of 111 candidate firefighte­rs in 2012.

In 2014, she was promoted to battalion chief EMT in Headquarte­rs Relief, then in 2016 to deputy district chief at 4th District Headquarte­rs, a position she’d held until her promotion Thursday to the $197,736 first deputy commission­er position.

Ford, a 35-year veteran, had since February 2016 served in the No. 2 position, before being appointed to fill the $202,728-a-year position of commission­er.

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Annette Holt

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