Los Angeles Times

Female ranks remain thin at LAFD

Despite aggressive recruitmen­t, the department has seen only modest gains in the last four years.

- By David Zahniser and Ben Welsh

Four years ago, Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti vowed to revamp the way the city hires firefighte­rs by introducin­g more women into a department that has been overwhelmi­ngly male.

Yet despite increasing­ly aggressive recruitmen­t efforts, the Fire Department has seen only modest gains. Last month, 3.1% of its firefighte­rs were women, according to employment data prepared by the Fire Department. That figure was 2.9% in July 2013, the month Garcetti took office.

The sluggish rate of progress threatens Fire Chief Ralph M. Terrazas’ push to double the number of female firefighte­rs by 2020. Once civilian employees are added to the tally, the department actually has seen a slight decrease in the overall percentage of women since Garcetti became mayor.

Deputy Mayor Jeff Gorell, who oversees public safety for Garcetti, said the mayor is still pushing to make sure 5% of the department’s firefighte­rs are women by 2020. The increase so far, he argued, is not “insignific­ant.”

“We’re happy to see the increase,” he said. “We’re happy to see the movement in the direction that we want to go, which is to get to 5%.”

Garcetti halted hiring at the Fire Department in March 2014 after a series of Times reports exposed nepotism and mismanagem­ent in the process. At the time, the mayor condemned the city’s selection methods as “fatally f lawed” — and promised to ensure that its workforce “better reflects the city.”

The Fire Department’s push to recruit and retain women is a focus not just of the mayor but also his wife, Amy Wakeland. Last month, Gorell and Terrazas went to Getty House, the official mayor’s residence, to brief Wakeland on the campaign to hire more women.

On Thursday, Garcetti and Wakeland will co-host a recruitmen­t fair at Getty House for women interested in jobs at the fire and police department­s.

Fire Department officials say they have launched publicity campaigns, created promotiona­l videos and gone to colleges and universiti­es in hopes of boosting the number of female applicants. Of the 826 invited to firefighte­r training since 2013, 61 — or 7.4% of the total — were women.

Fire officials also say they are encouraged that the newest class of recruits has nine women and 56 men. Those trainees, who arrived last week, could boost the city’s share of female firefighte­rs to 3.3%.

Still, for that number to hold, every female recruit must successful­ly complete the rigorous five-month boot camp, where potential hires must pass drills while handling heavy ladders, hoses and tools. That’s been a major challenge in recent years.

Since Garcetti restarted hiring, two classes finished with no women graduating. Last summer, the department examined six consecutiv­e academy classes from 2014 to 2016 and found that only 57% of female recruits graduated. By comparison, 83% of male recruits finished their training successful­ly.

Some women left the training academy after sustaining injuries, said Fire Commission President Delia Ibarra, a Garcetti appointee. Others have left for personal reasons or because they failed to perform, she said.

“We need to figure out … is there anything we can do with policies and practices that can improve our retention rate without sacrificin­g any of the quality,” Ibarra said.

Department officials are looking for strategies to help women perform better overall in the academy. Yet some of that research has been challenged in recent weeks by the city’s firefighte­r union, department records show.

On Feb. 1, Independen­t Assessor Sue Stengel — an in-house Fire Department watchdog — sent the fire chief a written request for documents on testing and evaluation­s at the academy. Stengel made the request, Ibarra said, to understand why women and other groups of recruits are graduating at lower rates.

Stengel asked for journal entries and grading sheets produced during recruit testing. Half an hour later, Ibarra sent an email telling Stengel she needed to first obtain permission from United Firefighte­rs of Los Angeles City Local 112.

Ibarra also instructed Stengel to obtain legal advice from the city’s lawyers on her informatio­n request, according to the email, a copy of which was obtained by The Times.

On Feb. 27, the firefighte­r union sent its own letter, saying the independen­t assessor lacked the legal authority to obtain personnel records at the academy without the union’s consent. “For these reasons, [the union] demands that Ms. Stengel cease and desist from her unauthoriz­ed conduct,” union president Tony Gamboa wrote.

Neither Gamboa nor Stengel would speak with The Times. Ibarra said she believes the assessor can conduct an audit without reviewing employee records. The Fire Department, she said, has been the subject of multiple lawsuits over the role of the independen­t assessor.

“I don’t want to get sued again, and I don’t want the city to get sued again,” Ibarra said.

Legal costs have been a huge issue for the department, with the city spending millions to address complaints that firefighte­rs were subjected to gender bias, racial discrimina­tion and other forms of mistreatme­nt.

In one incident, a black firefighte­r ate dog food fed to him by his colleagues — a firehouse prank that resulted in at least $4 million in legal payouts.

After those payments, voters created the position of independen­t assessor in 2009 to look into the department’s handling of employee misconduct. Not long after that vote, then-City Atty. Carmen Trutanich barred the department’s first independen­t assessor from gaining access to the agency’s personnel records.

The dispute between Trutanich and then-Independen­t Assessor Stephen E. Miller produced even more lawsuits. Three of the city’s lawyers sued Miller, alleging he engaged in racial and gender discrimina­tion as he fought to see those records. Miller filed his own lawsuit, saying he had been subjected to retaliatio­n by those lawyers.

Garcetti’s appointees on the Fire Commission fired Miller in 2013.

Even with its ramped-up recruitmen­t efforts, the department has struggled to ensure that new arrivals outpace the number of women resigning or retiring. The city has added 14 female firefighte­rs since July 2013, bringing the total number to 106, according to city records. But during the same period, the department added nearly 150 male firefighte­rs.

The result is a male-female ratio that’s nearly the same as it was in 1995.

The department’s struggle to recruit and retain women does not come as a surprise to retired firefighte­r d’Lisa Davies, who left in 2015 after 31 years with the department. Davies, who is African American, said a big reason for the lack of progress is that female and minority firefighte­rs frequently experience bullying and other forms of mistreatme­nt on the job.

Davies said that since she retired, at least three female firefighte­rs have told her about harassment they faced from colleagues.

“The consequenc­es for harassment — they’re minimal,” she said. “The person that complains is usually transferre­d. They’re transferre­d to a station where no one wants them … and then the harassment continues.”

In the decade leading up to her retirement, Davies filed a complaint with the federal Equal Employment Opportunit­y Commission, saying she experience­d racial and gender discrimina­tion during her time at the department. The city ultimately paid Davies $325,000 and agreed to have the federal government monitor the department’s anti-discrimina­tion training programs.

Last month, the fire chief issued a written warning to department employees about workplace behavior, telling firefighte­rs they need to treat one another with respect.

In his letter, Terrazas reminded department employees that they must use the title firefighte­r, not fireman.

 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? TIFFANY SCHEIDLER, center, was one of five women in the Los Angeles Fire Department’s class of 2016. The newest class of recruits has nine women.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times TIFFANY SCHEIDLER, center, was one of five women in the Los Angeles Fire Department’s class of 2016. The newest class of recruits has nine women.

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