Archive for Tuesday, March 25, 2008

Baldwin City fire fighters storm city council meeting

Baldwin City fire fighters Matt Quick, left, and Mike Hirschmann speak to the Baldwin City Council at Monday’s meeting regarding the decision to hire a full-time fire chief. They were supporting current Chief Allen Craig, who has had the position for 28 years. Enlarge photo

March 25, 2008

Baldwin City firefighters rallied behind longtime Fire Chief Allen Craig Monday night.

A month ago, the Baldwin City Council voted to hire a paid, full-time fire chief to lead the volunteer department instead of hiring a paid, full-time firefighter. The council discussed the change at meetings for a month and no members of the fire department attended the meetings.

That changed Monday when most of the fire department descended on the council meeting, many of them arriving in fire trucks.

“Basically what we’re getting at is why do we need a full-time fire chief?” said Matt Quick, a volunteer fireman who spoke for the large contingent. “We want Allen. We trust him with our lives.”

Craig has been fire chief for 28 years and a member of the department even longer. Although he was among those at the meeting, he didn’t speak and has declined to comment on the issue.

Among numerous concerns raised by Quick, the most pressing were the requirements for the chief detailed in the job description that effectively keep Craig from getting the job. Those include EMT and other certifications. City Administrator Jeff Dingman stood behind the requirements and disputed they were designed to eliminate Craig from the job.

“You asked several times, why doesn’t Allen get this job, why doesn’t he have a leg up?” said Dingman. “Every time I answered he is encouraged to apply.”

Quick was also concerned that a meeting promised by Tony Brown, council member who heads up the safety committee, didn’t occur before the council’s 3-2 vote Feb. 7 to establish the full-time fire chief.

“I owe all of you an apology,” Brown said to the fire fighters. “I drug my feet on that. You’ve got good individual questions here. We can address them all in a meeting.”

That’s where the matter was left Monday. Dingman said he will coordinate a meeting between the firefighters and the safety committee.

The idea behind a full-time fire fighter was hatched years ago. The idea was to provide coverage Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. when the majority of the volunteer firefighters are out of town.

“We’ve been talking about this for years,” said Council President Amy Cleavinger.

The position was in the budget this year and a full-time firefighter was hired in October. However, that situation didn’t work out and he resigned in early December, citing problems in dealing with two bosses — Dingman and Craig.

“That situation wasn’t given time to work out,” said Dingman.

At that point, Dingman and the safety committee decided that the answer was to have the full-time position be the fire chief and department head answering to the city. The council debated the issue in January at several meetings and finally passed the full-time fire chief position in February. Council members Ted Brecheisen, Jr., and Doyle Jardon voted against it.

“I don’t know how we don’t end up in the same position if we don’t change,” said Cleavinger in reference to the problems experienced with the full-time firefighting position.

“I’m still not sure I feel the chief route is the way to go,” said Jardon, himself a volunteer fireman in the Palmyra Township District. “I feel like the department feels like we set a criteria that the current chief can’t meet.”

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