Chicago Sun-Times

To diversify CFD, aldermen demand more frequent firefighte­r entrance exams

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN, CITY HALL REPORTER fspielman@suntimes.com | @fspielman

The Chicago Police Department has been holding frequent entrance exams — in May and June of this year with a third coming up in December — as it wraps up a two-year hiring surge to add 970 additional officers over and above attrition.

But the Chicago Fire Department is a different story. There was a firefighte­rs entrance exam in 2014. There won’t be another one until 2021.

On Tuesday, African-American aldermen who have clamored for diversity in a fire department with a long and documented history of discrimina­tion demanded more frequent testing.

“Don’t you think that’s an investment that is worthwhile? We can’t keep doing the same dance expecting different results. We’re not gonna be able to diversify the fire department until we recruit diversity to the fire department,” Ald. Leslie Hairston (5th) told Human Resources Commission­er Soo Choi.

“You think 2021 is an adequate amount of time to ensure that there’s diversity on the fire department? We have the history . . . of discrimina­tion [in a department that] dragged its feet for so long, by the time the list of eligible fire people were up, they were too old to actually join the force.”

On the hot seat at City Council budget hearings, Choi said each firefighte­rs entrance exam costs Chicago taxpayers $3 million.

With 18,207 firefighte­r candidates processed from the 2014 exam and 15,000 candidates still remaining on that list, it’s just not worth the money, she said.

“Unlike police officer eligibilit­y lists, the fire department does not move through its eligibilit­y lists not even close to as [quickly]. It becomes a cost-benefit analysis,” Choi said.

“I’m aware — more than aware — that there is a desire to test more frequently. I’m committed to looking at all possible options.”

Ald. Pat Dowell (3rd) pressed the point even further.

If money can be set aside each year to replenish Chicago’s rainy day fund, surely money can be squirreled away to hold more frequent firefighte­rs exams, she said.

“It’s important to do because, as we heard from the fire commission­er, he has to go through 100 people on the list in order to just find one,” Dowell said.

Choi repled, “I do believe that we should be testing more frequently. It really will boil down to whether we can find cost-effective ways to do that.”

The sensitivit­y from aldermen is well-founded.

In 1973, a federal class-action lawsuit accused the Chicago Fire Department of discrimina­tory hiring and promotiona­l practices. At the time, only 4 percent of Chicago’s 5,000 firefighte­rs were black. The lawsuit resulted in a four-year freeze on hiring and promotions and a federal consent decree mandating minority hiring.

Under Mayor Rahm Emanuel, Chicago resolved a bitter legal battle the mayor inherited from former Mayor Richard M. Daley, stemming from the city’s discrimina­tory handling of a 1995 firefighte­rs entrance exam.

On overall city employee hiring, Hispanic aldermen, demanding parity in city jobs and contracts, accused Choi last year of shortchang­ing Chicago’s fastest-growing group.

On Tuesday, Choi reported that she has finally hired the chief diversity officer two years after aldermen were told the $90,000-ayear job would be created.

She also reported the breakdown for the 1,971 employees hired so far this year. They’re 61 percent male, 39 percent female, and 36 percent white, 30 percent black, 26 percent Latino and 5 percent Asian-American.

 ??  ?? Ald. Leslie Hairston
Ald. Leslie Hairston

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