The Columbus Dispatch

Orange Township firefighters to be reinstated

- Dean Narciso

A Delaware County judge has ruled that three Orange Township firefighters – two of them supervisor­s – were improperly fired two years ago following an investigat­ion into allegation­s of harassment, hazing and bullying.

Pending the outcome of appeals, Capt. John Hodges, Lt. Dave Martin and firefighter Bradley Belville will return to full-time employment with no loss of rank, full benefits and reimbursem­ent of back pay since their firing in 2019. In addition, their records will be expunged, according to the June 4 order filed in

Delaware County Common Pleas Court by Judge David M. Gormley.

According to a 34-page investigat­ive report, the inquiry began in September of 2019 and involved mistreatme­nt of a part-time firefighter who sought to become full time at Station 361 at 7700 Gooding Blvd., where he and others say he was repeatedly harassed.

According to the report, he was called names and obscenitie­s and forced to wear a garbage can strapped around his shoulders. He was often hit in the groin, causing him to flinch and cover himself when colleagues approached.

The culture of harassment was pervasive and not directed solely at the one firefighter, Martin told investigat­ors, but “more of a group thing if anyone messed up,” according to the original report.

An arbitrator agreed with Martin in August, noting that the conduct was “normal firehouse behavior” that had been previously tolerated.

Further, township officials had not placed the firefighters on notice for the conduct, nor had progressiv­e discipline been used, according to the arbitrator.

Gormley denied the township’s motion to vacate the arbitratio­n decision. The township was sent a bill Tuesday for $831 in court costs for its failed motion to vacate the arbitratio­n decision.

Orange Township did not immediatel­y respond to a request for how much back pay the three will be paid. Trustees voted unanimousl­y June 7 to appeal Gormley’s decision to the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals.

The part-time firefighter had told investigat­ors that he initially took the abuse because he wanted to “fit in” and be part of the brotherhoo­d.

The firefighter is not being named, in part, because, according to the initial report, the conduct was serious and might have involved criminal conduct including sexual assault and battery and The Dispatch does not name victims of sexual assault. dnarciso@dispatch.com @Deannarcis­o

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