Los Angeles Times

L.A. FIRE MARSHAL REMOVED AMID TURMOIL

John Vidovich’s pending exit follows criticism over a backlog of building safety inspection­s.

- By Paul Pringle and Ben Welsh

The Los Angeles Fire Department is replacing the official in charge of enforcing fire safety codes for apartment houses, schools, hospitals and other highoccupa­ncy buildings after months of turmoil over lengthy backlogs in inspection­s.

Fire Marshal John Vidovich leaves one of the LAFD’s top jobs barely two years into his tenure, a term marked by embarrassi­ng disclosure­s about delinquent inspection­s and mounting criticism from the firefighte­rs union.

Last year, he pledged to reform the agency’s Fire Prevention Bureau after a Times investigat­ion found that about 6,800 buildings were months or even years overdue for inspection.

But several senior inspectors later told The Times that, under Vidovich, the bureau put the public at risk by requiring them to cut corners on safety reviews in a frantic drive to clear the backlog.

Fire Chief Ralph M. Terrazas said in a staff memo that Vidovich will step down next month and be assigned to the mayor’s office in an advisory position focused on new constructi­on. A Fire Department spokesman said Vidovich intends to retire in May.

The union that represents inspectors and other firefighte­rs earlier this year voted to approve a resolution of “no confidence” in Vidovich. Before the 3,100-firefighte­r department decided to replace Vidovich, the union, a powerful player at

City Hall, was preparing to pressure Mayor Eric Garcetti and other elected officials to oust him.

“We’re very happy,” said Capt. Frank Lima, president of United Firefighte­rs of Los Angeles City. “We had been talking about doing something, but then he got moved.”

Through a department spokesman, Vidovich and Terrazas declined interview requests. In a written statement, Terrazas said Vidovich will play a “critical role” in helping Garcetti’s office streamline the constructi­on review process, in addition to expanding safety regulation­s for abandoned oil and gas wells.

Lima said he had met with political strategist­s to develop a plan to unseat Vidovich. With Vidovich heading out the door, Lima said, the union remains comfortabl­e with its earlier decision to back Garcetti in his upcoming reelection bid.

“We’re with him,” Lima said.

In 2013, when Garcetti won the mayor’s office, the union supported his opponent, then-City Controller Wendy Greuel.

Spokesmen for Garcetti declined to answer specific questions about Vidovich’s departure or did not respond to interview requests. Deputy Mayor Jeff Gorell said in a statement that Vidovich will “complement” the office’s efforts to improve public safety.

The 2015 Times investigat­ion found that the LAFD was lagging on inspection­s for a third of the buildings it considers the greatest safety risk because they’re occupied by large numbers of people. Nearly half of them were more than a year overdue for an inspection of their sprinklers, alarms and other lifesaving equipment.

In addition, thousands of smaller apartment buildings had never been inspected, in violation of state law. Inspectors mainly blamed staffing shortages.

The department subsequent­ly launched what it called Operation Catch-up, assigning more firefighte­rs to serve as inspectors.

In a recent report, Terrazas and Vidovich said that nearly all of the overdue inspection­s had been cleared. But the inspectors who spoke to The Times said those numbers were bogus.

“That’s all fraudulent,” said Capt. Dave Riles, a 23year veteran of the department.

Many of the inspection­s that were counted as completed, Riles and others said, were performed by poorly trained firefighte­rs who were coaxed by supervisor­s to relax safety rules and overlook violations.

The result, the inspectors said, is that buildings across the city have been improperly declared safe.

In response to those complaints, Garcetti said in a statement that “safety can never be compromise­d, and bureaucrac­y can never be an excuse for inaction.”

Inspectors responsibl­e for ensuring that brush is cut back from homes also have complained about the department’s efforts to speed up the task. Terrazas has said many of the complaints are rooted in the brush inspectors’ slow embrace of new technology.

Vidovich, whose total compensati­on was about $236,000 in the last fiscal year, was previously the agency’s chief of staff. A department veteran of more than three decades, he also holds the rank of deputy chief.

Assistant Chief Kristin Crowley will become acting fire marshal next month. Department spokesman Peter Sanders said Crowley will be promoted to the job permanentl­y once Vidovich retires.

Crowley is the first woman named to the post. Sanders said she was not available for an interview.

 ?? Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times ?? “SAFETY can never be compromise­d, and bureaucrac­y can never be an excuse for inaction,” said Mayor Eric Garcetti, with Fire Chief Ralph Terrazas in 2015.
Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times “SAFETY can never be compromise­d, and bureaucrac­y can never be an excuse for inaction,” said Mayor Eric Garcetti, with Fire Chief Ralph Terrazas in 2015.

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