Make this page my home page

  1. Drag the home icon in this panel and drop it onto the "house icon" in the tool bar for the browser

  2. Select "Yes" from the popup window and you're done!

Lion Apparel Introduces Flame-Resistant, ...

Wave of '09 retirees to make Chicago Fire Dept. younger, more diverse

FireRescue1 News


Print Talk BackRegisterBookmarkRSSWhat's This


Wave of '09 retirees to make Chicago Fire Dept. younger, more diverse

By Fran Spielman
The Chicago Sun Times

CHICAGO — The Chicago Fire Department stands to lose 1,000 graybeards in 2009 — veteran firefighters and paramedics who will "max out" in their pensions — paving the way for a wave of retirements and more diverse replacements, a top mayoral aide said Wednesday.

Testifying at City Council budget hearings, Fire Commissioner Ray Orozco said the youth movement will begin during the first quarter of next year when roughly 70 recruits enter the fire academy.

They were chosen randomly from nearly 17,000 applicants who passed Chicago's first firefighter entrance exam in more than a decade.

To avoid a repeat of past legal controversies, City Hall made the May 2006 exam pass-fail. More than 83 percent of the 20,400 people who took the test passed, and 44 percent of them were minorities.

That means that a Chicago Fire Department now 68 percent white, 20 percent black and 11 percent Hispanic overall — and even whiter in its higher ranks — will become more diverse.

The slow but steady march toward diversity that aldermen have been clamoring for will be helped along by an avalanche of retirements.

Orozco said more than 1,000 veteran firefighters and paramedics — nearly a fourth of the department's uniformed work force — will be "maxed out from a pension standpoint" in 2009. The average Chicago firefighter is 44 years old with 15 years on the job. The new test had an age limit of 38.

"There's something to be said for youth and there's something to be said for experience. In the Fire Department, we'd like to find that fine line" between the two, the commissioner said.

Copyright 2007 Chicago Sun-Times, Inc.
All Rights Reserved




LexisNexis Copyright © 2008 LexisNexis, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.   Terms and Conditions Privacy Policy




Print Talk BackRegisterBookmarkRSSWhat's This






 Most Popular
Federal high-visibility vest rule takes effect Lessons learned, scars remain from '58 Chicago school inferno Interior Use of Positive Pressure – Part 1 Tenn. volunteer struck while directing traffic Leading at the Slow Station
All Popular Articles


Featured Product Categories
Radios AEDs Monitors Scheduling Software Ventilation
View All Categories


Today's Top Stories
Wednesday, December 3, 2008
Study highlights mutual aid reliance Gas explosion injures 28 in Spain Ohio facility prepares firefighters for gas, oil well blazes Blaze pushes back firefighters, kills Fla. toddler Message in bottle sent by NJ firefighters in '69 found in NC 25 Fla. firefighters dispatched to scene of 'horrific' crash
Line-Of-Duty Deaths
Robert J. Ryan Jr. - 11/23/2008 - [New York, New York] Steve Kline - 11/19/2008 - [Morris, Illinois] Carol Irene Taylor - 11/18/2008 - [Goldsboro, North Carolina]

Submit information on fallen firefighters in your area.

Line of Duty Deaths

FireRescue1 Exclusive
Full Story...
Federal high-visibility vest rule takes effect
A much-anticipated and wide-reaching change aimed at first responder safety has taken effect.
Full Story
Past Exclusives

Featured Columnist
Billy Hayes
Firefighter Safety: Use Your Initiative
Cultural Change: Just Do It 16 Ways to Stay Safe
All Columnists