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FDNY commissioner vows action on alleged disability abuse

Sal Cassano promised to check up on retired firefighters participating in physically demanding activities while claiming disability

By David Seifman
The New York Post

NEW YORK — Fire Commissioner Sal Cassano promised yesterday to call back retired firefighters for medical reviews if questions arise about the legitimacy of their tax-free disability pensions.

“We haven’t done it a lot, but if a story comes out, we would recall, either way,” he said.

“If somebody didn’t get a disability who thought they should get a disability, we would bring them back and let them run through it to see if they deserve it, and the same if somebody got it — like the stories we’ve seen in the paper — we would bring them back, and we would look at it.”

Cassano’s comments came in response to stories in The Post detailing how a 42-year-old firefighter who worked at Ground Zero and retired with asthma and other ailments is collecting $74,624 a year while participating in mixed-martial-arts matches.

The Post also reported that a retired FDNY lieutenant is competing in marathons and triathlons while receiving an $86,000-a-year pension for lung disease.

Cassano is one of Mayor Bloomberg’s three appointees to the FDNY pension board, which has the right to summon firefighters once a year for medical checkups if they retired on disability pensions with less than 20 years on the job.

But in the last 35 years, the board hasn’t reopened a single case in which an FDNY member’s disability was questioned — even though disability retirements are reaching new records.

Last year, 84 percent of all 405 FDNY retirees qualified for a three-quarters-pay, tax-free disability pension. In 2008, 90 percent of the 457 who left the force made the disability cut.

The Mayor’s Office, responding to Post inquiries, agreed to undertake a review of red-flagged disability cases.

Cassano stressed that a retired firefighter with lung problems might be able to compete in sports competitions in a clear-air environment without necessarily being able to work for the FDNY, a job where noxious fumes are a daily reality.

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