Skip to content


DC firefighter disputes Chief Kenneth Ellerbe’s claim that training academy harassment did not involve ‘physical sexual misconduct’. Tells about touching & comments.

40 comments

Do you want to sell a rig? Click HERE to find out how with SellFireTrucks.com.

Previous coverage of this story here & here

Chief Ellerbe’s February statement correcting TV story about harassment claims

Jay Korff, WJLA-TV/ABC7:

An active duty female D.C. firefighter is breaking her silence to speak up  for young female cadets who allege sexual harassment at the DC Fire and EMS  Training Academy.

Fearing retaliation, the firefighter requested anonymity. She’s  being referred to as “Susan” in this story.

She says when she joined a recruit class a few years ago, it came with a  warning from a female academy employee about some of the male instructors.

“She just said, ‘be careful, because a lot of them, they don’t know their  boundaries,” she says.

Almost immediately, Susan says, the sexual harassment began. One instructor  commented, “guess who wore the wrong bra today,” she says.

After a tough day of training, Susan says that same instructor got her alone.  She says his hand moved from her shoulder slowly down to the top of her  backside.

“And then as the hand like went lower to like you know here, I was just like,  ‘Um, yeah please don’t ever touch me. Like, that’s hugely inappropriate,’” she  says.

Fearing for her job, Susan kept quiet until she saw ABC7′s recent  investigation centering on two young female cadets, fresh out of high school,  who accused two instructors of sexual harassment. She says those cadets came to  her for advice and told her what the instructors said.

“You know, they’re babies. And, so for them to speak to them like that and  you know, just make any sort of sexual comments toward them is just disgusting,” she says.

The fire department has reassigned the two instructors to positions outside  of the academy and launched an internal investigation.

But when ABC7 approached D.C. Fire Chief Kenneth Ellerbe in February, he  insisted the alleged harassment was “not” sexual in nature.

“What we believe happened was more some inappropriate language and touching,  not of a sexual nature, but the matter made the young ladies uncomfortable,” Ellerbe says.

But one male firefighter says he also felt compelled to speak out, saying  he’s aware of cases in which superiors intimidated female firefighters into not  filing complaints.

“And I know of two issues uh, first hand, um where issues of sexual  harassment or harassment towards women have been basically brushed under the  table,” said the male firefighter who declined to be identified.

A fire department spokesperson declined comment about the status of the  latest alleged harassment investigation. He did say the department provided  additional training for staff to address concerns regarding inappropriate  conduct toward colleagues. And a female instructor has been placed at the  academy to train cadets as well.

Click here to follow STATter911.com on Facebook (hit “like”)

Can’t anyone get it right around here? For third time in just 24 hours Chief Kenneth Ellerbe says DC reporters got a story wrong.

47 comments

Click here to follow STATter911.com on Facebook (hit “like”)

WRC-TV/NBC 4 reporter Mark Segraves is as least the third reporter this week who has had the accuracy of his reporting questioned in statements released by DC Fire & EMS Department Chief Kenneth Ellerbe. Segraves had reported late Friday afternoon that three firefighters, including a lieutenant who had done battle before with the chief, face possible disciplinary action for appearing in uniform at an event with President Barack Obama. A few hours later this statement from Chief Ellerbe was posted on the TV station’s website:

Contrary to reports in local media, the DC Fire and EMS Department is not considering any disciplinary action against uniformed personnel for appearing alongside President Obama. At the request of the Deputy Mayor for Public Safety and Justice, DC FEMS is simply reviewing its internal protocols for such appearances to ensure that both the Department and its employees are fully informed.

We fully support the efforts of President to highlight the essential and life saving work that our first-responders do every single day, and welcome his invitation for our members to participate. We’re exceedingly proud of the men and women that wear the DC FEMS uniform, and thank the President for his support.

If this sounds familiar, it’s probably because just 24 hours earlier Chief Ellerbe called into question the actions of reporters on two other stories. On Thursday evening, communications director Lon Walls sent out a pair of statements from Chief Ellerbe saying news reports on sexual harassment allegations at the Training Academy and on the death of a man on New Years at the time of an ambulance shortage were both inaccurate.

Also interesting, is a public Twitter conversation Chief Ellerbe had Friday evening with another reporter who covers the department, Andrea Noble of The Washington Times. Here it is:

This conversation ended with this Tweet from Chief Ellerbe to reporter Noble:

maybe you should schedule some time in our office to establish a foundation for accurate information as some others have done? 

Do you want to sell a rig? Click HERE to find out how with SellFireTrucks.com.

DC Fire Chief Kenneth Ellerbe says two recent news stories aren’t accurate. Sends out press releases on training academy sexual harassment & provides a timeline on New Year’s ambulance delay story.

5 comments

Click here to follow STATter911.com on Facebook (hit “like”)

Previous coverage of Training Academy story

Previous coverage of New Year’s ambulance delay & billing

Read Chief Kenneth Ellerbe’s statement on Training Academy story

Read Chief Kenneth Ellerbe’s statement & timeline on New Year’s ambulance delay

Yesterday evening Lon Walls, communications director for the DC Fire & EMS Department, sent out press releases on behalf of Chief Kenneth Ellerbe that described two recent news stories about the department as inaccurate. One is Chief Ellerbe’s detailed response to a story broadcast by WRC-TV/NBC 4 way back on February 8 about a bill for services to the family of a man who died on New Year’s Day. There was a lengthy wait for an ambulance in that case because of staffing shortages. For the first time since the incident occurred, the department has issued a detailed timeline. Click here for the release.

The second story is the one we brought you yesterday from WJLA-TV/ ABC 7 about claims by female cadets about sexual harassment at the Training Academy. Here is that  release.

On this page are the two follow-up stories the TV stations did in reaction to the press releases from Chief Ellerbe. Above is the video from the Training Academy story and below is what was published on WRC-TV/NBC 4‘s website about the ambulace issue:

D.C. Fire and EMS released a statement Thursday explain what happened early New Year’s Day, when a man died after waiting for an ambulance.

Durand Ford Sr. waited 30 minutes for an ambulance as he was having trouble breathing and that ambulance came from Maryland, according to his family. While fire officials acknowledge a delay in getting an ambulance to the scene, they said a paramedic was on scene providing appropriate care in 10 minutes.

According to D.C. fire, after the call was dispatched at 1:26 a.m., a fire truck responded at 1:35 a.m. and a second truck – one with the paramedic – arrived at 1:37 a.m. A call for additional assistance was placed at 1:40 a.m., and because no D.C. ambulances were available, Prince George’s County responded to a mutual aid request, D.C. fire officials said. However, a D.C. ambulance became available at 1:42 a.m., and D.C. fire said the D.C. ambulance reached the scene at 1:55 a.m. – before a Prince George’s County ambulance got there.

The ambulance that did transport Ford was from D.C., not Maryland, according to D.C. fire. The ambulance from Prince George’s County was not used and returned to Maryland.

D.C. fire also cited a high volume of calls at the time as well as a high number of personnel out sick as the reason why an ambulance wasn’t available before 1:42 a.m.

Furthermore, what Ford’s family believes was a bill for $700 was a notice from the billing contractor requesting insurance information and permission to file an insurance claim, according to D.C. fire.

D.C. Fire and EMS does not generally comment on specific patient cases due to privacy issues, officials said, but they commented Thursday due to “inaccurate” information in newspapers, broadcasts and on social media.

Do you want to sell a rig? Click HERE to find out how with SellFireTrucks.com.

DC Fire & EMS cadets claim instructors sexually harassed them. Investigation underway.

23 comments

Click here to follow STATter911.com on Facebook (hit “like”) 

More on cadet program reinstated by department in September after long hiatus

Cadet program has troubled past: here & here

Jay Korff, WJLA-TV/ABC 7:

An exclusive ABC7 I-Team Investigation has learned that there is a looming sex scandal in the D.C. Fire Department involving female trainees.

Sources tell ABC7 numerous women are part of a formal complaint targeting the department. Two training academy instructors have been accused of harassing female cadets and sources say that harassment was sexual in nature.

Young cadets are trained by mentors who shepherd the recent high school graduates into the field of fire fighting.

But multiple sources tell ABC7 that two female cadets recently accused two training academy instructors of sexual harassment.

“A young lady was touched and told to by the official to call them daddy,” says the mother of a female cadet, who asked to not be identified for fear of retaliation. She says while her daughter was “not” harassed, other young women told her daughter about various sexual advances directed at them.

“It was alleged that they mentioned about shaking their behind, mentioning of their breasts to some of the young cadets,” she says. “These young girls, they are in a position where they have to look up to these people and they should be setting some kind of example and not preying on them.”

“There have been some allegations that have been brought forward,” Fire Chief Kenneth Ellerbe says to ABC7. “We have referred them to our Equal Employment Opportunity Counselor, which means that we can’t discuss it any further

Ellerbe says he takes the allegations very seriously, but believes the alleged inappropriate conduct was not sexual in nature.

“The matter made the young ladies uncomfortable and we’ve done everything we can to remove those members from the process in training them and we’ll take additional action if necessary,” Ellerbe says.

D.C. Councilman Tommy Wells, as the chairman of the public safety committee, says he’s concerned that this is the first he’s hearing about these allegations.

“This is not something that I want to hear and it’s something that’s completely unacceptable, but I realize also they are allegations and there will be an investigation,” Wells says. “But in the event that it’s true it’s absolutely not acceptable. Not in our city.”

The chief says the reason his department didn’t release information about this investigation was the female cadets who brought these allegations forward asked the chief to keep the matter confidential.

But one parent told ABC7 that if these allegations prove true, some very public policy changes need to be made to make sure this never happens again.

Do you want to sell a rig? Click HERE to find out how with SellFireTrucks.com.