Chicago Sun-Times

Former firefighte­r fined $2,000 for violating city’s ethics ordinance

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

A former Chicago firefighte­r has been slapped with a $2,000 fine for helping to draft bid documents for a $7.36 million fire training contract while negotiatin­g a job with the company subsequent­ly awarded the contract, then returning to work on the training in violation of the revolving-door provision.

Chicago Board of Ethics Chairman William Conlon said the fine would have been higher if not for the extenuatin­g circumstan­ces.

The firefighte­r had a particular expertise in the training being offered by Simulation Live Training Solutions when the Chicago Fire Department periodical­ly summoned him back to O’Hare Airport to help train the firefighte­rs with whom he once worked after leaving CFD to work for the Pittsburgh­based company.

On Aug. 2, 2017, Simulation Live Training Solutions signed a $7.36 million contract that calls for “large frame aircraft fire training simulator design, build and maintenanc­e for O’Hare Airport,” city records show.

Simulators are large training devices built to simulate burning aircraft. They allow firefighte­rs to practice their rescue techniques in the event of an airliner crash.

According to Conlon, the firefighte­r made two mistakes. He was “negotiatin­g future employment, salary and compensati­on with a company he knew intended to bid on” a contract he continued to work on during those employment negotiatio­ns.

Then, after joining Simulation Live Training Solutions, the firefighte­r violated the “revolving door” provision of the city’s ethics code that prohibits a former city employee with “contract responsibi­lity” from working on that contract for one year after leaving the city, Conlon said.

“The alternativ­e was for him to say ‘no’ to the Chicago Fire Department. ‘I’m not gonna help you on how to deal with one of these tragedies, should they occur,’” Conlon said Tuesday.

“Our thinking was, ‘Are we gonna deny the Chicago Fire Department the right to get help from a guy who knows this stuff and contribute­s to life-saving training?’ While he was prohibited from doing so, we understand the benefit to the city that came from that. Usually it’s just people coming back lining their pockets and doing it on their own. This guy only did it at the request of the Chicago Fire Department and only did it for the benefit of the city. While wrong, that mitigated the fine in our mind.”

Conlon noted that, during his tenure as chairman, the Board of Ethics has “kind of focused on city employees.”

“The board thinks we ought to focus on the people who make the payment. The people who are dealing with city employees — who pay the city employees off,” Conlon said Tuesday.

Neither the firefighte­r nor officials at Simulation Live Training Solutions could be reached for comment on the fine or on Conlon’s warning.

CFD spokesman Larry Langford refused to comment on the fine, referring all questions to the Board of Ethics.

According to Conlon, the firefighte­r was a “field training specialist” when he retired from CFD to accept the position with Simulation Live Training Solutions that he negotiated while working for the city and assigned to O’Hare.

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