Los Angeles Times

LAFD OFFICE GAINS POWER

Fire Commission OKs move to give in-house watchdog ‘unfettered access’ to firefighte­r disciplina­ry files.

- By David Zahniser

The panel that oversees the Los Angeles Fire Department voted Tuesday to give the agency’s internal watchdog “unfettered access” to the disciplina­ry files of its firefighte­rs, nine years after voters created the post to assess the agency’s handling of misconduct complaints.

The Board of Fire Commission­ers unanimousl­y changed its policy to give the watchdog, known as the Office of the Independen­t Assessor, the power to obtain unredacted interview transcript­s, evidence and other records generated during a discipline case.

Still, the commission stopped short of allowing the office to review unredacted personnel files that are unrelated to discipline. Fire Chief Ralph Terrazas recommende­d that the panel, made up of appointees of Mayor Eric Garcetti, look at that issue in the future — after conferring with the firefighte­rs’ union and the city’s lawyers.

Commission President Delia Ibarra said the panel had struck a middle ground, balancing the need for trans-

The department, relying on Trutanich’s opinion, refused for years to turn over unredacted discipline records to the watchdog, said Fire Commission­er Andrew Glazier, who supported the change in policy. That, in turn, prevented the independen­t assessor from making “timely and complete assessment­s of discipline in the department, which is the whole point of this position,” he said.

Trutanich’s opinion was contested early on by the department’s first independen­t assessor, Stephen E. Miller, who accused members of Trutanich’s team of improperly withholdin­g documents. Three of Trutanich’s lawyers responded by suing the city, saying Miller, who is white, had engaged in discrimina­tion and a campaign of harassment.

Each lawyer received a $100,000 settlement, according to the city attorney’s office. Garcetti became mayor in 2013 and his new appointees on the Fire Commission soon fired Miller — a move welcomed by the firefighte­rs union. Sue Stengel, a mayoral aide, was selected as Miller’s replacemen­t the following year.

Stengel launched an audit this year to find out why women and other groups were graduating from the Fire Department academy at lower rates. Garcetti and his wife, Amy Elaine Wakeland, have made recruitmen­t of women at the department a major priority.

Stengel asked the fire chief on Feb. 1 for journal entries and grading sheets produced during recruit testing. About a half-hour later, Ibarra, the Fire Commission president, sent an email informing Stengel she needed legal advice and permission from the firefighte­r union.

Ibarra later told The Times she acted to keep the department from being sued.

A week after Ibarra sent her email, City Atty. Mike Feuer produced a new legal opinion rescinding the office’s prior assessment. In the confidenti­al opinion, a copy of which was obtained by The Times, Feuer’s team said a 2017 court ruling meant the independen­t assessor no longer needed to show a “compelling need” to gain access to the employee personnel files.

That means that access to those files “should be timely and unrestrict­ed,” the opinion said.

Fire Department officials said Stengel already receives access to unredacted copies of the settlement agreements that are reached with firefighte­rs in discipline cases, which include an employee’s name, the type of misconduct and the punishment issued. Tuesday’s vote went further, allowing the office to secure the underlying documents in a misconduct case.

“We have now given her more access than she’s ever had,” Ibarra said.

Stengel declined to comment on the commission’s decision. Gamboa, the firefighte­rs union president, said his group is still weighing whether to file a challenge over the disciplina­ry files.

Firefighte­rs union “members have a reasonable expectatio­n that their records will remain protected from disclosure ... to an outside entity,” such as the independen­t assessor, he told the panel.

Commission­er Jimmie Woods-Gray voted for the policy change but said she was unprepared to give the in-house watchdog other unredacted personnel records. Woods-Gray, who has been heavily involved with United Teachers Los Angeles, said employees in that union have long resisted providing access to such records.

“We’re not very open to people looking at our files,” she said.

 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? FIRE COMMISSION President Delia Ibarra at Tuesday’s meeting, where the independen­t assessor’s office was given power to get unredacted interview transcript­s and other records generated during a discipline case.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times FIRE COMMISSION President Delia Ibarra at Tuesday’s meeting, where the independen­t assessor’s office was given power to get unredacted interview transcript­s and other records generated during a discipline case.

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