The Palm Beach Post

She attains career goal: fire chief

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Diana Matty joined West Palm Beach Fire Rescue fresh out of high school, in October 1994.

She was 18.

Work hard and someday you’ll be chief, they told her.

“I took that to heart. I’ve been a hard worker all of my career,” Matty said.

They made good on their promise at 5 p.m. Tuesday — on an interim basis, anyway — when City Administra­tor Jeff Green called to tell Assistant Chief Matty that Fire Chief Dan Hanes had left and to ask her to stand in as chief.

While the city decides how to fill the job permanentl­y, Matty, 41, who has risen through the ranks as a firefighte­r, paramedic, hazmat expert and emergency-operations leader, commands a department with 228 employees and an annual budget of $35.7 million.

“This has been a goal of mine for my career,” the daughter of a retired Miramar firefighte­r said Thursday, the morning after the change was announced to staff. “I’m sure it was no surprise to people that it was something I always wanted to do.”

No word from the city on why Hanes, who’d only been on the job since October 2015, left so suddenly. Matty said she didn’t know he was going to leave.

Born in Hialeah, raised in the Florida Keys, she went to high school in Pembroke Pines before joining the Tony Doris department as a firefighte­r. She earned her emergency medical technician license, then her paramedic license. In 2002, she became a lieutenant; in 2005, a captain; in 2012, a battalion chief; and in 2015, assistant chief in charge of emergency operations, among other responsibi­lities.

Along the way, she earned an associate’s degree from Palm Beach State College, as well as a bachelor’s degree in fire and emergency services and a graduate certificat­e in emergency management, both from the University of Florida.

She has saved her share of lives as a firefighte­r and rescuer. She has traveled the country as a fire service instructor for various organizati­ons. She’s also a master hazmat instructor and has traveled to teach in New York City, New Orleans, Seattle, among other cities.

Locally, she has served as the department’s public informatio­n officer, winning friends among the media for her accessibil­ity and helpfulnes­s, even when some call her at 6 a.m. for details on the latest fire. “I try to be a good PIO and provide pertinent, relevant informatio­n when I can,” she said.

She also has worked on department budgets, particular­ly as assistant chief, but also when she was a captain managing daily purchase for the hazmat station, all the way down to the toilet paper. “It’s kind of like running a household, and as you go up in rank, the house gets bigger.”

And she has pulled in money, not just spent it. She estimates she has written and received $9.4 million in federal grants for the department.

Her top priority this week is SunFest, where department paramedics staff a medical tent to serve the five-day music event on the waterfront, where 175,000 are expected to brave the heat.

Also on her to-do list will be to oversee constructi­on of two replacemen­t fire stations, No. 4 in Flamingo Park and No. 8 on Northlake Boulevard, near the Ibis Golf and Country Club.

She’ll have no problem keeping busy. The city and department have grown since she joined 22 years ago.

In 1994, the department was responding to 15,000 to 16,000 calls a year. Now it’s up to 25,000 to 28,000 and the department and the technology it deploys have changed considerab­ly,” she said.

One other thing that’s different: She’s now one of six department heads (police, fire, parks and recreation, public utilities, informatio­n technology and city clerk) who are female in West Palm Beach, where the mayor, three of five commission­ers, the city attorney and deputy city administra­tor, among others, also all are female.

“I’m proud to be serving in the position I am,” Matty said of the interim posting. “It’s a true honor.”

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