New York Daily News

FIRESTORM RAGES ON

Another FDNY chief scorches commish, demands job change

- BY THOMAS TRACY

A sixth FDNY staff chief has requested to be demoted and put back in the field as high-ranking firefighte­rs continue to fume over a leaked audio recording of a closed-door meeting with Fire Commission­er Laura Kavanagh, the Daily News has learned.

Staff chiefs at the Feb. 3 meeting, which included Chief of Department John “Jack” Hodgens, the most senior uniformed official in the FDNY, and Chief of Fire Operations John Esposito, were outraged after learning that a recording of the gathering was shared with The News.

Kavanagh, the city’s first woman fire commission­er, is heard on the recording telling chiefs she wanted more “innovative, outside the box thinking.” Instead, over the course of 40 minutes, the chiefs assailed her with questions about their personal cars, vacation carryovers and what she meant when she said there is no “bullying” of subordinat­es allowed.

“Is it fair to say that despite the point I made, the majority of the questions here today were about pay and vacation and cars?” Kavanagh asked the chiefs, according to the recording.

In a letter sent to Kavanagh on Thursday, Deputy Assistant Chief Michael Massucci asked to be booted back to deputy chief. Massucci complained that he was transferre­d from his post as chief of uniformed personnel and sent to the bureau of operations without cause.

“I have never had any disciplina­ry issues or complaints filed against me and have been well respected by my subordinat­es and superiors throughout my career,” Massucci wrote, adding that the transfer was made “without any reasonable explanatio­n, except to state that you are taking the bureau of personnel in a different direction.”

“My reassignme­nt to the Bureau of Operations and placing me in the toolroom in the Bureau of Tech Services was an attempt to humiliate and disgrace me amongst my superiors, subordinat­es, coworkers and friends. Stating later that my skillsets were being better utilized in my new position was yet another attempt to further disgrace me,” Massucci wrote. “The lack of transparen­cy and the lack of truthfulne­ss, not only with me but with the entire Uniformed Executive Staff, has brought me to this decision. I can no longer function as a Deputy Assistant Chief under your administra­tion.”

Massucci joins Hodgens, Esposito and

FDNY Deputy Assistant Chief Frank Leeb who have requested in writing to be demoted to deputy chief and moved out of the department’s MetroTech headquarte­rs in downtown Brooklyn. Two other chiefs have made the same request, but not in writing, sources said.

Kavanagh demoted Assistant Chiefs Fred Schaaf, Michael Gala and Joseph Jardin to deputy chief earlier this month after Hodgens would not perform the deed, sources said. The three chiefs were considered “bad apples” and refused to act on Kavanagh’s directives, a source in the fire commission­er’s camp said.

Schaaf was the Queens borough commander when allegation­s of racism were made in a firehouse. Sources said he resisted transferri­ng and disciplini­ng some firefighte­rs in the aftermath.

Jardin was chief of fire prevention where he objected to allowing buildings to self-certify their fire safety systems, sources said. But he also was the subject of a series of complaints with the city’s Office of Equal Employment Opportunit­y over his tough-guy management style. The Fire Prevention Division has the largest black workforce in the FDNY.

Gala, a disciple of former Chief of

Department James Leonard who clashed with Kavanagh, sued over allegation­s he was passed over for promotion for criticizin­g a diversity push in the FDNY. Gala was considered a divisive element in the department, one source said.

“She [Kavanagh] can move people in the department to better the safety of the department and all New Yorkers,” a source with knowledge of the commission­er’s thinking told The News.

Now, the chiefs are trying to determine whether recording the closed-door meeting violated department policy, a high-ranking FDNY source with knowledge of the drama said.

“In the past, firefighte­rs would get in trouble if they videotaped or audiotaped anything happening at the firehouse, so the same should apply here,” the source said.

“At a department meeting of any kind, you are free to speak, exchange ideas and discuss them,” the source said. “If you’re going to be taped outside the minutes of the meeting then that stifles the debate and the conversati­on.”

In past FDNY administra­tions, demotions, particular­ly at the higher ranks, almost never occurred, one FDNY source said.

“It just didn’t happen,” the source said. “If they weren’t doing their job, they just wouldn’t get promoted any more. If there was a real issue, the commission­er would just ask them to retire.

“Now everyone is up for grabs,” the source said.

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 ?? ?? FDNY Commission­er Laura Kavanagh (top) taking heat from upper ranks after demoting or transferri­ng several of them, including Chief of Fire Operations John Esposito (above).
FDNY Commission­er Laura Kavanagh (top) taking heat from upper ranks after demoting or transferri­ng several of them, including Chief of Fire Operations John Esposito (above).

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