Marin Independent Journal

US female firefighte­rs fight discrimina­tion with lawsuits

- By Tom Foreman Jr.

WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. >> The highest ranking female firefighte­r in Asheville, North Carolina, says she was repeatedly discrimina­ted against because of her sex and fought to keep her job while battling breast cancer. The first female chief of a municipal fire department in the state says she briefly pondered suicide after years of sexual harassment.

Joy Ponder and Susanna Schmitt Williams are among numerous female fighters in the United States who have filed lawsuits against their employers alleging they were subjected to demeaning behavior that helped end their careers.

Advocates say going to court is sometimes the only effective recourse in a field where women make up such a tiny part of the workforce. According to the National Fire Protection Associatio­n, 93,700, or 8%, of U.S. firefighte­rs were female in 2018, the latest year for which data was available.

Williams, who was fired in July 2019, told The Associated Press that she was “the subject of sexualized rumors (and) hostility in the form of insubordin­ation by those who reported to me.”

Williams said Carrboro Town Manager David Andrews overturned both her disciplina­ry and operationa­l decisions, and for the latter, relied instead on the recommenda­tions of men in the department who were lower ranked and had less experience and education. Andrews didn’t respond to an email seeking comment.

Ponder, who resigned from her post as Asheville Fire Department division chief in September, said she faced years of harassment and gender discrimina­tion from Chief Scott Burnette after she led outside research on the prevalence of post-traumatic stress disorder among city firefighte­rs.

Burnette did not return a phone call seeking comment. Peggy Rowe, an assistant to City Manager Debra Campbell, said the city doesn’t comment on ongoing lawsuits.

Ponder filed her lawsuit in November and then an amended complaint last month. Williams filed her lawsuit in January. Both are still pending.

Similar lawsuits have been filed — and won — by female firefighte­rs in Illinois, Texas and Virginia.

Court documents show a female firefighte­r in Country Club Hills, Illinois, won an $11 million verdict in

2018 after filing a lawsuit alleging that her colleagues openly watched pornograph­y at the station house and broke down a shower door while she was bathing.

The U.S. Department of Justice announced a $275,000 settlement with the City of Houston in October, after two female firefighte­rs alleged their male co-workers urinated on the walls, floors and sinks, soiled their bathroom, and wrote racebased slurs on the walls of their work and living

space at the fire station.

The City of Norfolk, Virginia, last year agreed to an $87,000 settlement with a female firefighte­r who alleged a hostile work environmen­t.

Williams’ lawsuit contends that a Charlotte, North Carolina-based law firm hired by the town of Carrboro to conduct a questionna­ire of employees found up to 12 instances of harassment and discrimina­tion against her that led to a hostile work environmen­t. The law firm also

found fault with Andrews, the town manager, for allowing fire department employees to go around Williams and take their complaints about the department to him, according to the suit.

Williams said she filed two complaints of sexual discrimina­tion against members of the fire department during her tenure as chief but neither was taken seriously. She says she became so distressed by the situation that one day after work she walked into her garage and considered taking her own life.

“I thought ‘Oh, my God, I could crank up the car and just silently go and just be done with it all’ because I was that stressed and that depressed over everything that had happened,” Williams said.

Instead, she thought of her sons and decided to see her fight through to the end. She received clearance from the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunit­y Commission to proceed with a lawsuit against Carrboro.

Williams said she is the third female department head in Carrboro to file such a suit against Andrews, who recently announced that he would retire in July.

Ponder, who became division chief in 2014, took a leave of absence in early 2019 to battle breast cancer. She said that when she returned at the end of the year, Burnette and the deputy chief “designed and executed an effective demotion and campaign to display me as a poor performer and divisive employee.”

She was placed under her bosses’ close supervisio­n — “effectivel­y surveillan­ce,” she said — told to stay away from the firefighte­rs under her command and moved to an isolated corner office from which she said she “was afraid to even walk to the restroom or copier.”

 ?? GERRY BROOME — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Susanna Schmitt Williams, the former chief of the Carrboro Fire Department, considered suicide after enduring harassment in her department despite becoming chief.
GERRY BROOME — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Susanna Schmitt Williams, the former chief of the Carrboro Fire Department, considered suicide after enduring harassment in her department despite becoming chief.

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