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UPDATED: A new week & DC fire is still in the news. Chief Kenneth Ellerbe says media stories are sensationalistic & unfair.

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Previous coverage of Chief Ellerbe

Listen to entire interview of Chief Kenneth Ellerbe by WTOP Radio’s Mark Segraves

From ABC7/WJLA-TV:

Chuck Ryan, a firefighter with D.C. Fire and EMS, was burned on over 40 percent of his body after a two-alarm fire last April.

“I would have had a better chance for the injuries and the pain and suffering that we’re going through if we would have had the better station wear,” Ryan said.

Chief Ellerbe said that even if Ryan and the other firefighters had been wearing the protective shirts, their injures would still be severe.

“If the outer shell fails, then it’s highly unlikely the shirt they were wearing underneath is going to protect them further,” he said.

Ellerbe said firefighters have a long-sleeved version of the shirts, so there was no reason for any of them to be outfitted inadequately.

“If they’re worried about being protected, they should wear their long-sleeve shirts 365 days a year,” Ellerbe said.

Ellerbe remains steadfast in his defense of not permitting firefighters to wear the shirts with the old logo, but he does acknowledge they can help minimize injuries.

“It probably would have provided a modicum of protection, but not as much as the outerwear,” he said.

The shirts aren’t the only controversies facing Chief Ellerbe. He is also under fire for a recent reveal that he faced an accusation of sexual harassment in his last position in Sarasota, Fla.

“I don’t know how to undress a person with my eyes,” Ellerbe said. “I think you need to use your hands to do that, first of all. I’m not the type who undresses anybody.”

Ellerbe said that much of the criticism he faces comes from the union and firefighters who are resisting the scheduling changes he has implemented.

By Paul D. Shinkman and Mark Segraves at WTOP.com:

D.C.’s fire chief continues to parry criticism against him, citing what he says are inaccuracies in recent media reports that the city failed to vet harassment claims against him and that protective gear sitting in storage could have saved firefighters from injury.

In an interview with WTOP Monday morning, Chief Kenneth Ellerbe, who was tapped for the position by Mayor Vincent Gray in December 2010, claims scathing reports by Washington Times against him are “unfair,” “not accurate” and “sensationalist.”

The Times recently reported Ellerbe was not properly vetted before taking the job as chief of D.C. Fire & EMS, and that the city overlooked sexual harassment claims at his former position in Sarasota, Fla. where he also served as fire chief.

“Those articles coming out of (The Times) have been fraught with unproven allegations and inaccuracies,” he says. “I think they have not been fair and accurate in their reporting, but sensationalism sells stories.”

Ellerbe says he does not recall “undressing someone with his eyes,” per the Times report that he “leered at female employees and intimidated other employees,” adding he wouldn’t know how to undress someone using only his eyes.

He also denounced ever referring to himself as a “vindictive ‘expletive deleted.’”

“I would never refer to myself that way,” he says, “nor would I call anyone else that.”

The chief has also caught flak from an Examiner.com report that he kept $70,000 worth of fire-resistant shirts in storage because they did not align with the firefighters’ uniform. These could have been used to protect firefighters, the report claims.

Ellerbe said Monday these specific shirts don’t have any protective qualities, and are solely designed not to melt onto the firefighter’s skin if the protective outer jacket and pants fail.

He confirmed the shirts, which do not conform to the uniform, are sitting in the warehouse for the department while it looks for a way to repurpose or sell them.

“This is the deal when we take these leadership positions: We have to understand there’s going to be some resistance sometimes, especially if change is involved,” he says. “If you can’t take the heat, these aren’t the positions for you.”

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DC still in the news: Burned firefighter speaks out about shirts sitting in storage.

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Previous coverage of Chief Ellerbe

Watch testimony of Chief Ellerbe at Wednesday's City Council hearing (Fire department portion of hearing begins at 1:23)

From WJLA-TV?ABC 7's Jennifer Donelan:

D.C. firefighters and councilmembers are asking if protective shirts have been sitting in storage instead of being worn by firefighters–because the shirts didn't have the right patch.

Veteran D.C. firefighter Chuck Ryan was the most critically injured of five firefighters in a house fire that flashed over last April. 

Today, only on ABC7, he talks about the recent report in the Washington Examiner that fire-resistant shirts designed to prevent burn injuries were sitting in a fire department warehouse last year when Ryan and four others were burned.

With second and third-degree burns on 40 percent of his body, Ryan is still on the very long road to recovery.

The Examiner reports the shirts were in storage and not handed out because the protective clothing didn't have the correct patches. Almost $70,000 of polo shirts bore logos designed by the previous administration. The shirts didn't have the new department logo ordered by current Chief Kenneth Ellerbe, so the shirts stayed in the boxes, according to the Examiner.

Councilman Phil Mendelson's office has been asking the department for months about rumors that the protective shirts were available. But he says he was always told the shirts didn't exist.

"It was disturbing after a year to find out they do exist," Mendelson says.

"We work in the best city in the nation," Ryan says. "Why wouldn't we have the best equipment available?"

"The temperature got so hot the uniform melted into my skin," Ryan says.

If he wasn't wearing the best gear–because of a patch–that's disheartening, he says.

Ryan says the shirts now in storage might have helped lessen the burns on his upper arms and back. But he says we will never know how much.

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DC Chief Kenneth Ellerbe on why safer cotton shirts for firefighters are sitting in warehouse: ‘Sometimes there’s trickery in terms of one administration to another’.

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Previous coverage of Chief Ellerbe

Watch testimony of Chief Ellerbe at Wednesday's City Council hearing (Fire department portion of hearing begins at 1:23)

Did former DC Fire & EMS Department Chief Dennis Rubin or his administration resort to trickery when 1700 polo shirts made of 100 percent cotton were ordered for firefighters at a cost of $70,000 to taxpayers? Current Chief Kenneth Ellerbe raised that possibility in an interview with WRC-TV's Darcy Spencer as he explained why those shirts have never been used by firefighters. The report gave no specifics on what kind of trickery Chief Ellerbe was referring to.

Chief Ellerbe banned the use of the shirts because they came with a patch introduced under the Rubin administration that Ellerbe has now banned.  The shirts are in a warehouse where they have been for many months. According to news reports, firefighters will continue to wear uniforms made of polyester and blends that can contribute to burns instead of the new shirts. 

The very existence of the shirts, until recently, was a mystery or secret. So much so that DC Councilmember Phil Mendelson indicated at a hearing that he had not been getting the straight scoop from Chief Ellerbe when he previously asked about the shirts.

Here's more from Darcy Spencer's report:

“I don’t want to waste anything, but I don't want to be responsible for something somebody else ordered that they know we’re not going to use, either,” he said. “Sometimes there's trickery in terms of one administration to another, as well.”

"It's been a huge push for my membership for fire-resistive station wear, and we’re not backing off of that,” union President Ed Smith said. “As long as it’s provided – these shirts have been paid for by the taxpayers, and they should be in use.”

 Chairman Phil Mendelson was obviously frustrated over getting the runaround about the polo shirts, which he had been told didn’t exist.

“This has been a big rumor, and there have been a lot of complaints about it,” he said.

Fire officials said they've received inquiries from D.C.'s Inspector General's Office about the shirts.

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Chief Kenneth Ellerbe responds: Live interview this morning discussing sexual harassment claims when chief was in Florida.

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Previous coverage of Chief Ellerbe

Watch testimony of Chief Ellerbe at Wednesday's City Council hearing (Fire department portion of hearing begins at 1:23)

Chief Kenneth Ellerbe was interviewed this morning on Fox 5 Morning News about the Washington Times article this week outlining allegations of sexual harassment that occurred when Ellerbe was chief in Sarasota County, Florida. Click the player above to watch the video.

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The latest from your Nation’s Capital: Mayor backs fire chief after article on sexual harassment claims. $70,000 in shirts that are safer for firefighters but have the wrong logo sit in warehouse.

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Earlier coverage of sexual harassment claim against Chief Ellerbe

Previous coverage of Chief Ellerbe

Watch testimony of Chief Ellerbe at Wednesday's City Council hearing (Fire department portion of hearing begins at 1:23)

From Tom Howell Jr and Andrea Noble at The Washington Times:

Mayor Vincent C. Gray on Wednesday offered a vote of confidence to D.C. Fire Chief Kenneth Ellerbe after a report detailing sexual harassment and intimidation complaints against Chief Ellerbe at his prior job in Florida.

Mr. Gray said Chief Ellerbe remains a qualified pick for the top post at the D.C. Department of Fire and Emergency Medical Services based on his extensive knowledge of the agency’s duties and operations.

“I think that Chief Ellerbe has done an exceptional job as fire chief,” Mr. Gray said.

View more videos at: http://nbcwashington.com.

From Karen Gray Houston at Fox5/WTTG-TV:

A spokeswoman for committee chairman Phil Mendelson said he did not know about a complaint. His understanding was that there was an accusation, but never an official, formal complaint.

Mayor Vincent Gray said he has not read the story, but had only accolades for his chief, saying he has done an exceptional job.

A spokesman for the mayor said asking for personnel files is not part of the hiring process.

From Liz Farmer at the Washington Examiner:

 Fire-resistant shirts designed to prevent burn injuries when a firefighter's outer uniform fails were sitting in storage last year when five District firefighters were injured during a two-alarm blaze.

The reason the shirts were in storage rather than on firefighters? The clothing didn't have the correct D.C. Fire and Emergency Services patch, Fire Chief Kenneth Ellerbe testified at a hearing Wednesday. Ellerbe added that the order was placed before he started his job last January.

"There were held because of the logo and it's a polo shirt [so it's] not a uniform shirt," Ellerbe said at a D.C. Council Judiciary Committee performance hearing.

From Andrea Noble at The Washington Times:

Nearly $70,000 worth of brand-new shirts ordered by the District’s fire department have gone unused because they are adorned with the wrong emblem, fire officials testified Wednesday.

The shirts were delivered early last year. But because they are polo shirts, which Fire Chief Kenneth Ellerbe has said can no longer be worn as part of the uniform, and because they are embroidered with an old emblem that the District's Fire and Emergency Medical Services Department no longer uses, the shirts have sat boxed in a warehouse, fire officials admitted.

“Chief, I have asked you many times, have I not, about the truth of the polo shirts? And every time I’ve asked until this week the answer was been, ‘There are none,’” Phil Mendelson, at-large Democrat and chairman of the Judiciary Committee, said during the hearing.

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DC fire chief faced sexual harassment claim in Sarasota County, FL. Washington Times questions why Kenneth Ellerbe wasn’t fully vetted by Mayor Vincent Gray.

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Read Washington Times story on Chief Kenneth Ellerbe

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Read statement from Sarasota County Battalion Chief Joe Robinson

Read statement from Sarasota County firefighter Carolyn Norwood

The Washington Times published a lengthy story this evening looking at allegations of sexual harassment against DC Fire & EMS Department Chief Kenneth Ellerbe while he was chief in Sarasota County, Florida. The article, by Andrea Noble and Matthew Cella, also takes a closer look at the unusual arrangement that allowed Chief Ellerbe to still be a deputy chief in DC while employed in Sarasota County.

The reporters are asking the administration of DC Mayor Vincent Gray why Chief Ellerbe was not fully vetted and why his personnel file was not obtained from Sarasota County. They also asking why there was no national search for a fire chief.

Chief Ellerbe says the allegations were properly investigated by Sarasota County and denies there was any sexual harassment. He blames the complaints on the union in Florida.

The article is so detailed it is difficult to provide excerpts that would be fair to all sides. I suggest you read it in its entirety.

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