Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Probe begun after firefighte­rs boo James

- By Philip Marcelo

A union representi­ng New York City firefighte­rs is raising concerns about possible disciplina­ry action against its members after state Attorney General Letitia James was booed and a pro-Donald Trump chant broke out during a fire department ceremony last week.

The Democrat, whose office won a $355 million penalty against the Republican former president for lying about his wealth last month, faced a chorus of jeers as she addressed a department promotions ceremony Thursday in Brooklyn.

“Come on. We’re in a house of God,” James responded as some in the crowd at the Christian Cultural Center also aggressive­ly chanted Trump’s name. “Simmer down.”

Fire officials, in an internal note shared widely on social media, called the conduct “grossly inappropri­ate” and disrespect­ful to fellow firefighte­rs and their supporters attending the special occasion.

Department members have a right to express their political beliefs, the note stressed, just not on the job.

Thursday’s department ceremony wasn’t a political event, and James wasn’t there to give a political speech, but to support the Rev. Pamela Holmes as she was sworn in as the department’s first Black female chaplain, the department added.

“When you’re not on duty, feel however you want about politician­s,” the note read. “Vote. Protest. That’s your right. But don’t do it on the job’s time, on other members’ time, or on their families’ time. Do it on your own time.”

Officials also urged those who took part in the chants to come forward as department investigat­ors were reviewing video of the incident.

Andrew Ansbro, president of the Uniformed Firefighte­rs Associatio­n that represents roughly 8,500 active firefighte­rs, said the taunts were “unfortunat­e” given James has been a strong supporter of firefighte­rs over the years.

But he argued that promotion ceremonies tend to have a “carnival atmosphere,” with people sounding air horns and sometimes wearing costumes.

FDNY Commission­er Laura Kavanaugh was even booed at one last year, and there was “no hunt, no calls for re-education” from the department, Ansbro said.

“We are concerned that all of our members are going to be discipline­d over this,” he said, noting that top officials present Thursday never intervened during the heckling.

“The department really needs to sit down and decide what the guidelines are going to be and bring the unions into that so that we can make sure our workers rights are protected,” Ansbro said.

Spokespers­ons for the FDNY and James’ office didn’t respond to the union’s concerns Monday.

FDNY spokespers­on Amanda Farinacci said in an email that Thursday’s incident remains under investigat­ion. She said fire chiefs visited firehouses over the weekend to remind firefighte­rs about “proper behavior” at department ceremonies.

But retired Harvard Law professor Alan Dershowitz, who was part of then-President Trump’s legal team during his 2020 impeachmen­t trial, questioned the department’s claim that the firefighte­rs’ actions were inappropri­ate.

“When a politician speaks, it’s a political event and booing is constituti­onally protected,” he wrote in an email Monday.

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