Chicago Sun-Times

LIGHTFOOT BLAMES RECRUIT NEGLIGENCE FOR VIRUS OUTBREAK THAT SHUT DOWN FIRE ACADEMY

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN, CITY HALL REPORTER fspielman@suntimes.com | @fspielman

Mayor Lori Lightfoot on Wednesday blamed recruit negligence for the coronaviru­s outbreak that shut down the Chicago Fire Department academy and denied that testing for promotions now going on at McCormick Place poses a similar threat.

The fire academy was closed earlier this week for a deep cleaning, halting in-person training, after 46 instructor­s and firefighte­r candidates tested positive for the coronaviru­s.

Lightfoot said “a lot of precaution­s were put in place at the academy” to ensure training could continue safely during the pandemic. Recruits were “admonished over and over again what they needed to do when they left the academy” to stay safe and return the next day without endangerin­g themselves, their families and their colleagues.

“Unfortunat­ely, my understand­ing is that didn’t happen. And that was a significan­t problem. … People didn’t pay attention. They didn’t listen. They didn’t follow precaution­s. They were engaged in lots of activities after hours that put them and their colleagues at risk. I hope we don’t see a repeat of that. But [those are] the facts,” the mayor said.

“We can put rules and plans in place. We can advise people about what the best practices are. We can provide them with equipment and tools. But, all of this — as we’ve been saying since March — really comes down to the kind of individual decisions that are made by people.”

On Wednesday, 116 Chicago Fire Department captains showed up at McCormick Place to take an exam for battalion chief. That will be followed by three days of exams for lieutenant, with up to 200 candidates per day on Thursday, Friday and Saturday.

Lightfoot was asked why the city is forging ahead with those tests during a pandemic when mask-wearing firefighte­rs taking the exam “don’t feel safe” and the gathering of hundreds “violates the indoor capacity rule” in Illinois.

“I push back on some of the premise of the question. I don’t think that’s necessaril­y correct,” the mayor said.

“We’re having these … tests at McCormick Place, which is a massive indoor facility. And we’ve taken every precaution possible. It is not the same when you’re sitting for several hours in one test as opposed to the circumstan­ces that happened at the academy.”

A spokespers­on for the city’s Department of Human Resources said test takers would be “more than six feet apart and in individual cubicles that are approximat­ely 10 feet wide with walls approximat­ely six feet high.”

Masks will be required. Hand sanitizer will be provided. All “equipment and testing stations will be thoroughly cleaned between each test session,” the spokespers­on said.

Jim Tracy, president of the Chicago Firefighte­rs Union Local 2, said union board members went to McCormick Place on Wednesday to observe the process. They were pleased with what they saw.

“Members were all in their own cubicle ... Checking in was done with social distancing 10 feet away from each other. There are 200 stations and extra computers should some not work properly,” Tracy wrote in a text message to the Sun-Times.

In January, hundreds of candidates who had studied for months in hopes of being promoted to lieutenant and battalion chief were sent home from McCormick Place after a widespread computer failure made it impossible to continue oral exams for both positions.

California-based CPS HR Consulting was paid $1.4 million to administer the oral exams, the first in eight years for lieutenant and the first for battalion chief in two years.

The city said the cost of the re-test would be absorbed by the vendor. It was not clear if the contractor also would be required to cover costs associated with having firefighte­rs fill in for the test-takers.

This time, Human Resources said it took a “series of measures to ensure nothing but a seamless administra­tion of the tests following technical difficulti­es experience­d” in January.

“The problem earlier in the year had to do with the network. They have been testing it for the last four days and everything is fine. It’s the same company being used,” Tracy wrote.

As for the virus outbreak at the fire academy, Tracy said it will re-open in “about two weeks after all the candidates test negative” for COVID-19.

“It’s impossible to say it won’t happen again. Our job is hands-on work and the candidates need the training,” Tracy wrote.

“They are wearing masks and social distancing when possible. I just pray they all fully recover.”

 ?? GOOGLE MAPS ?? Training at Robert J. Quinn Fire Academy, 558 W. De Koven St., was temporaril­y suspended after multiple people tested positive for coronaviru­s.
GOOGLE MAPS Training at Robert J. Quinn Fire Academy, 558 W. De Koven St., was temporaril­y suspended after multiple people tested positive for coronaviru­s.
 ?? PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES ?? A sign directs firefighte­rs entering McCormick Place to the promotion tests being administer­ed there starting Wednesday.
PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES A sign directs firefighte­rs entering McCormick Place to the promotion tests being administer­ed there starting Wednesday.
 ??  ?? Mayor Lightfoot
Mayor Lightfoot

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