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Lodi, NJ moving forward with fire department alcohol ban. Now working with fire officials to modify ordinance covering firehouse bar & related issues.

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Here’s an update on the controversial move by the Borough Council and mayor in Lodi, New Jersey to regulate the use of alcohol at the Lodi VFD. The Borough Council is working with fire officials to come up with a modified version of the ordinance that would deal with the firehouse bar and related issues.

Kim Lueddeke, The Record via NorthJersey.com:

The ordinance had been scheduled for a final vote at the council’s meeting Tuesday, but was pulled from the agenda after the council met with fire officials in closed session last week. At that meeting, Mayor Marc Schrieks said firefighters’ concerns and possible changes to the ordinance were discussed.

“There were ideas and suggestions they came up with that we didn’t think about,” Schrieks said.

(Fire Chief Darren) Yuhas has said that any alcohol kept in the firehouses is stored in a locked area and that — while firefighters might have a few drinks after responding to an emergency call — he did not believe firehouse alcohol consumption was excessive.

Lodi, NJ fire chief says proposed firehouse ban on alcohol ‘totally uncalled for’. Mayor calls it a liability issue.

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Read Hillsdale, NJ councilmember resigns after bringing up issue of firehouse bar

Kim Lueddeke, The Record:

“It’s totally uncalled for,” Fire Chief Darren Yuhas said.

But Mayor Marc Schrieks says the borough, which owns the firehouses, needs to have control over what happens in its buildings. Council members were also concerned about the possibility of underage firefighters getting their hands on alcohol, Schrieks said.

“We all thought it was in the best interests to curtail the potential access to alcohol,” Schrieks said.

“They [the borough’s firefighters] are totally upset,” said Yuhas, who attended the meeting with about 30 uniformed firefighters.

AP:

Firefighters are upset that a northern New Jersey town is seeking to place limits on alcohol in firehouses.

The Lodi Borough Council has introduced an ordinance that would require approval for any function in which alcohol is consumed in the town’s three firehouses.

The borough manager would submit the information to the town’s liability insurance carrier, which would determine whether the    function would be covered. If not, the fire department would have to obtain its own coverage.

Mayor Marc Shrieks tells The Record newspaper council members are concerned about underage firefighters drinking. 

Fire Chief Darren Yuhas says alcohol is stored in a locked area so there’s little risk of underage drinking. A hearing on the ordinance is scheduled for Sept. 18. 

WCBS-Radio:

The fire chief said sometimes members will have a beer after battling a blaze, but said the restriction could affect the functions hosted at firehouses.

The mayor said twelve events would be allowed per year with approval required 45 days in advance. 

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Chicago ride-along controversy: Columnist uses opening scene of Backdraft to explain latest battle between Commissioner Hoff & Inspector General.

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Read column by Alden Loury

There is a very interesting column on Huff Post Chicago by Alden Loury the publisher of The Chicago Reporter. It is about the latest dust up between Chicago Fire Department Commissioner Robert Hoff and Inspector General Joe Ferguson. You may recall the pair previously battled over how discipline would be handled after the IG's investigation found members of the Fire Prevention Bureau had falsified mileage reimbursements. Hoff also told Ferguson to basically butt out when the IG urged a cutback on the minimum staffing of fire apparatus.

The latest disagreement is over ride-alongs. Here's how Loury describes the issue:

Investigators with Chicago Inspector General Joe Ferguson's office discovered that a battalion chief took an adult son along on fire emergencies and allowed him to stay overnight at a Chicago firehouse for a period of nearly two years. Ferguson recommended a 20-day suspension for the battalion chief, who "recklessly exposed the City to liability," according to the OIG's office.

But Commissioner Hoff ignored that recommendation and gave the battalion chief — whom city and fire officials wouldn't identify — a "verbal reprimand" with no time off, in the process creating more friction with Ferguson's office. (This is at least the third time in the past few months that the commissioner and Ferguson have squared off.)

CFD spokesman Larry Langford says Commissioner Hoff cited progressive discipline as his justification for the verbal reprimand, pointing to an otherwise good record for the BC.

Langford also had to tell Loury that Commissioner Hoff's childhood did not weigh heavily in the decision making on this one. Loury was talking about Commissioner Hoff, his brother and father being inspirations for the 1991 movie Backdraft. Alden Loury begins his column by describing the opening of the film where the younger brother rides along on a fire that ends up taking his father's life.

While that is a fictionalized account of the 1962 death of Commissioner Hoff's father, Loury continues with the ride-along theme by citing a quote from the Commissioner's interview with the Chicago Sun-Times last year after the death of his firefighter older brother Raymond, whom he lived with as a teenager. "I was 14. Every weekend he took me to work with him. He showed me everything."

As for the rules on CFD ride-alongs, here's more from Loury:

Langford said requests for ride alongs are evaluated on a case-by-case basis, but approval is typically reserved for individuals with a legitimate interest in firefighting activity or research — such as journalists or academics. Anyone approved for a ride along must complete a waiver of liability (which apparently was not filled out in the case of the battalion chief.) Langford said the department also has a program allowing medical students to ride along in ambulances as a part of their educational process.

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