New York Daily News

BRAVE FAMILY

Dad, 3 sons serve increasing­ly diverse FDNY

- BY THOMAS TRACY

For FDNY Firefighte­r Robert Thomas and his three sons, fighting fires and saving lives has become a family affair.

All four are city firefighte­rs stationed throughout Brooklyn, joining a growing number of the department’s black “legacy” families, where children follow their mothers and fathers into the FDNY.

“It’s an incredible feeling knowing that they’re following in my footsteps,” Robert Thomas, 61, told the Daily News Wednesday. “Being in the FDNY is truly a family experience anyway. Over the years it meant more to me than I originally thought it would and I know it would be the same for them too.”

Thomas took the test for the FDNY in 1982. When he got accepted, he first turned it down, deciding instead to take a job with an insurance company, the Brownsvill­e native remembered.

But members of the Vulcan Society, a fraternal group of black firefighte­rs, encouraged him to join the academy — and he’s never looked back, said the 38-year FDNY veteran, currently assigned to Engine 205 in Brooklyn Heights.

But being a black New York City firefighte­r in the 1980s, when the FDNY was almost exclusivel­y white, wasn’t easy, he recalled.

“It was tough coming in from Brownsvill­e to the fire department, it was a completely different culture,” he remembered. “It was a challenge going in, but I think I changed a lot of hearts and minds by doing the job and they helped me become a better firefighte­r. A level of respect grew between us.”

The number of blacks in the FDNY never rose above 650 in a force of about 11,000 until about 2002, when the Vulcan Society filed a landmark lawsuit charging that blacks and Latinos were subjected to disparate treatment in the almost all-male and predominan­tly white department.

The case was finally settled in 2014, sparking landmark revisions in the department’s recruitmen­t and testing procedures. The changes have had some positive results: last year, 20,516 of the 72,611 young men and women applying for the FDNY, or about 28% were black, according to city statistics.

African-Americans are also breaking through to the higher ranks. In September, 22-year FDNY veteran Malcom Moore was promoted to Deputy Chief, the first black firefighte­r to be elevated to that position in 30 years.

The FDNY has changed quite a bit in the 18 years since the lawsuit was filed, said Thomas, who was over the moon when his sons Jason and Nathan both joined the department in 2014 and trained in the academy together. His third son Stephen, a Navy veteran, became an FDNY firefighte­r in September.

Thomas said he knew that by joining the department, his kids — Jason, 29, is assigned to Engine 216 in Williamsbu­rg, while Nathan, 27, is currently serving in Engine Company 219 near the Barclays Center in Fort Greene and Stephen, 25, is assigned to Engine Company 225 in East New York — would become better people by serving in the fire department.

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 ??  ?? Nathan, Jason, Robert and Stephen Thomas (top left to right) all work for the FDNY in Brooklyn. Above, dad Robert and his sons smile as they ride a rig.
Nathan, Jason, Robert and Stephen Thomas (top left to right) all work for the FDNY in Brooklyn. Above, dad Robert and his sons smile as they ride a rig.

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