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Facebook Post Prompts Discipline for Five DC Firefighters

Five DC firefighters are in hot water over some controversial comments they posted on Facebook.

The controversy began when a firefighter posted a photo of a DC police officer who had just issued the firefighter a traffic ticket. Along with the photo the firefighter included a comment to the effect "This is why we should be careful and take our time getting to incident scenes."

The comment was understood to refer to a March, 2013 incident where an injured DC motorcycle police officer had to wait 20 minutes for an ambulance. Following the initial post, four other firefighters added their thoughts.

Due to the inflammatory nature of the posts, Fire Chief Kenneth Ellerbe transferred the five members to desk jobs while the matter is investigated.

 

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This will be an interesting case to follow as both the First Amendment and the right of unionized employees to engage in “concerted activities” in social media, are implicated. We will have to await more detail to be able to fully analyze both aspects.

The following is taken from the NLRB’s August 18, 2011 memo on social media, outlining the approach it applies when looking at whether employee speech in social media is protected under either of two tests it applies in such cases: Atlantic Steel and Jefferson Standard. The case involved a car salesman who posted photos and comments about his dealership that his employer took offense to.

Although the employee posted the photographs on Facebook and wrote the comments himself, we concluded that this type of activity was clearly concerted. We found that he was vocalizing the sentiments of his coworkers and continuing the course of concerted activity that began when [coworkers] raised their concerns at the staff meeting. Further, we concluded that this concerted activity clearly was related to the employees’ terms and conditions of employment. …

Atlantic Steel is generally applied to an employee who has made public outbursts against a supervisor, while Jefferson Standard is usually applied where an employee has made allegedly disparaging comments about an employer or its product in the context of appeals to outside or third parties.

Applying Atlantic Steel, we found that the employee’s Facebook postings … were not so opprobrious as to lose the Act’s protection. The activity concerned a subject matter protected under Section 7. Further, although the activity was not provoked by any unfair labor practice committed by the Employer, the nature of the outburst was much less offensive than other behavior found protected by the Board. …

Under Jefferson Standard, the inquiry is whether the communication is related to an ongoing labor dispute and whether it is not so disloyal, reckless, or maliciously untrue as to lose the Act’s protection. Here, the employee’s postings were neither disparaging of the Employer’s product nor disloyal. The postings merely expressed frustration with the Employer’s choice of food at the sales event. They did not refer to the quality of the cars or the performance of the dealership and did not criticize the Employer’s management. We found it irrelevant that the postings did not clearly indicate that they were related to a labor dispute given that they were neither disparaging nor disloyal.

UPDATE: May 15, 2013

Posted in Constitutional Rights, Disciplinary Action, First Amendment, Labor Law, Police-Fire, Politics, Social Media, You Can't Make This Stuff Up

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Police Fire Wars in Tennessee

The latest skirmish in the on-going “who’s in charge” battle between police and fire (which I call police-fire wars) occurred Tuesday in Knox County, Tennessee where a Knox County Sheriff cited a firefighter for failing to move his apparatus at the scene of a vehicle accident.

The incident occurred on I-75 southbound. A Rural Metro engine was blocking the southbound lanes, and Knox County Sheriff’s Office Patrolman Terry Wright directed the driver, Matthew Clift, four times to move the vehicle. He was then cited for failure to obey a lawful order.

Knox County Sheriff Jimmy Jones and Rural/Metro Chief Jerry Harnish both said incidents like this are rare and declined to comment on the specifics beyond the fact they plan to meet soon to discuss it.

While admittedly these kinds of disputes are rare (I have roughly 20 such cases in my database), the fact they happen at all is a cause for concern in the day and age where everyone is “supposedly” trained and using in ICS.

One thing that particularly bothers me about these cases: police officers do not arrest or give tickets to each other at incident scenes for “failure to obey”. Can you imagine a patrolman giving his sergeant a ticket because the sergeant didn’t obey his order to move his vehicle? Now that would be a headline, wouldn’t it? Why do you suppose that is?

Somehow police officers are able to deal with the frustration of their fellow police officers not “obeying” them… it is only those “other” folks – firefighters, paramedics and “civilians” who get cited… And maybe that is the problem – to police officers we are nothing more than “civilians”… part of the great masses who are there to serve as the recipients of the officer’s services… Those who must obey.

I am sure the officer would say “hey, they have to respect the law… we all have to respect the law”. And he would be right. We do…  ALL OF US… have to respect the law.

Back to ICS… My question in these cases remains – who was in charge. If the police officer was in charge, or was carrying out the commands of the IC, then the firefighter and his officer have some explaining to do. That is the end of the story barring some imminent safety threat that was evident to the firefighters but not to the police officer.

If the fire department was in charge –OR IF THERE WAS UNIFIED COMMAND AS THERE LIKELY SHOULD HAVE BEEN, and the police officer was acting outside the scope of his assigned duties as a responder then the ticket not only should be dismissed, the officer should be investigated and perhaps charged with interfering with a firefighter in the performance of his duties…. Because we all have to respect the law. All of us.

That is exactly what happened in Leadville, Colorado in 2010 when a deputy sheriff arrested a fire captain on an EMS run because he refused to leave the scene without seeing the patient. The charges were later dropped against the captain and the deputy was charged criminally with obstructing a firefighter. More on the Leadville case.

More on the Knox County case.

The police-fire wars problem can be solved quickly if police officers who arrest/interfere with firefighters at emergency scenes are themselves charged criminally with interfering with a firefighter. Just as a patrolman realizes he cannot issue a ticket to his sergeant (or another patrolman) because he didn’t obey the patrolman’s order to move his vehicle… the same thought process ought to apply with other emergency responders. We are on the same team!

Posted in Criminal Law, Disciplinary Action, Police-Fire

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