WTFX
Reprinted with Permission
Top management and union officials get in a heated discussion over “rolling brownouts,” the selective temporary closure of Philadelphia firehouses to save money
Since August 2, the Philadelphia Fire Department has been conducting rolling brownouts, with three companies closing each day shift and three closing each night shift.
The personnel from those companies are then moved to other in-service companies that need staff because someone is on leave.
The plan saves the cash-strapped city with $3.8 million in overtime expenses gone.
But critics call them, at best, an easy solution to a much bigger problem and a decision that will ultimately cost lives.
Bill Gault, the President of the Firefighters Union, and Fire Commissioner Lloyd Ayers were on Fox 29 News at 10 to debate the topic, and the discussion got heated at times.
Gault says the city is playing Russian roulette with people’s lives because of the closures.
Ayers says a number of measures have increased public safety over the years and the city’s impact study has shown that a realignment of firefighting resources shows the job can be done with fewer people.
“We need to move forward,” Ayers said “There will less firefighters, less firehouses.”
Gault challenged Ayers to produce that research and called the city’s plan “smoke and mirrors.”
“The smoke and mirrors just aren’t there,” Ayers responded, saying that the brownouts have been used for awhile
“Personnel are being used in a different way. That’s why there’s crying now,” Ayers said.
“I really resent the word crying Commissioner,” Gault said. He said there was no redundancy in the city’s planning.