Wednesday, June 19, 2013
Wednesday, June 19, 2013

Firefighters union disrupts opening of new Tacony station in protest of Nutter

About 200 activists from Philadelphia's firefighters union disrupted a ribbon-cutting ceremony at the city's first new fire house in 15 years by staging a walkout as an opening prayer was being said and chanting their criticisms of Mayor Nutter outside the $6.7 million station in Tacony.

51 comments

Firefighters union disrupts opening of new Tacony station in protest of Nutter

POSTED: Tuesday, January 8, 2013, 1:30 PM

About 200 activists from Philadelphia’s firefighters union disrupted a ribbon-cutting ceremony at the city’s first new fire house in 15 years by staging a walkout as an opening prayer was being said and chanting their criticisms of Mayor Nutter outside the $6.7 million station in Tacony.

Union representatives said they will begin collecting signatures for a petition to hold a recall election for the mayor, who has appealed a series of legal decisions that would award retroactive pay raises and other benefits to the firefighters, who have been working without a contract since 2009.

Nutter, Fire Commissioner Lloyd Ayers, Deputy Mayor Everett Gillison and even a Catholic priest had to raise their voices to be heard over the chants of "Re-call, re-call" and "bind-ing, bind-ing," the latter referring the binding arbitration awards that Nutter has twice appealed. 

While opening new fire houses is something the union has been asking for, it protested the event to show their continued displeasure with Nutter's policies.

One carried a sign displaying an acronym for the mayor’s name: “No Good, Ugly, Two, Timing, Evil, Rat.”

After the event, Nutter said that he respected the firefighters’ 1st Amendment right to protest and that he wanted to celebrate the opening of the new station, at Magee and Keystone.

“It’s America. People have many opportunities and certainly a right to express themselves in a variety of fashions. The community folks may not have been too happy about their timing, given that they were celebrating their new station,” Nutter said. “I’m staying focused on doing my job each and every day and people will do whatever they said they’d do.”

51 comments
Comments  (53)
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 4:03 PM, 01/08/2013
    Tourists don't come to Philly to see City Hall they come to see Independence Hall. Nutter has lost 3 times now and the legal fees are climbing past what it would have cost to pay the raises. The only ones winning this fight are the lawyers
    Sage Advice
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 5:32 PM, 01/08/2013
    The city is NOT POOR. In the arbitration hearing the arbitrator looked over the city finance records and saw that the city gave the police an even MORE expensive contract.
    TheGreek1979
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 2:17 PM, 01/08/2013
    @citylumberjack The people of Tacony wanted that firehouse, to replace the old one that was torn down just for an on-ramp to 95 and we were without it for over 2 years. How would you like to lose your local firehouse and have to wait extra minutes for the fireman to come from somewhere else.
    RichH
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 2:21 PM, 01/08/2013
    all public city and state unions should be disbanded. stop waste!
    Richard Burns
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 2:27 PM, 01/08/2013
    Any time you work for the government, you are expected to work and not go on strike if you are police, fire, EMS or work for the US Government. If you do not want this, then go look for job in private sector, union or non union.
    Aces high
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 3:00 PM, 01/08/2013
    Who's talking about a strike ? Please re-read article
    Sage Advice
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 2:27 PM, 01/08/2013
    Nutter SUCKS! Worst Philly mayor EVER! F-ing disgrace!
    dundermifflin
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 2:44 PM, 01/08/2013
    Any Time a Mayor stands in front of a Law firm and demands the back taxes it owes the city or he will foreclose on there building, he is a firm and good mayor looking out for all of the city and so they may be able to some day pay a raise and fund schools a little better!
    Richard Burns
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 2:29 PM, 01/08/2013
    These guys havent had a raise in years, that real sad. Nutter is nutz!
    CHARLES MANSON
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 2:32 PM, 01/08/2013
    Right on Mr. Burns!!!!! And you can add the teachers too!!
    oneway
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 2:33 PM, 01/08/2013
    This comment has been deleted.
    rombola67
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 2:53 PM, 01/08/2013
    Any you can thank Philly firefighters for laying it all on the line to keep that number low.
    Sage Advice
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 3:21 PM, 01/08/2013
    the few that actually work...yes.
    KYS24
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 2:39 PM, 01/08/2013
    it is really hard to understand the firefighters beef with the Nutter. As Aces High commented, where do these people think they work? They should be resting up to fight the arson that is happening.
    Paul Deon
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 2:46 PM, 01/08/2013
    i'm anything but pro-union, but these guys are actually highly underpaid. nutter recently found an *extra* 30 million dollars to put into parks and recreation, but refuses to give these guys a 3% raise (their starting base salaries start in the 30s). i'm sure playgrounds are 'very important' but the raises for these guys should be a higher priotity.
    Zero


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About this blog
Chris Brennan, a native Philadelphian and graduate of Temple University, joined the Daily News in 1999. He has written about SEPTA, the Philadelphia School District, the legalization of casino gambling, state government, the mayor, the governor, City Council and political campaigns. E-mail tips to brennac@phillynews.com
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David Gambacorta spent a small eternity writing about cops, drug dealers and serial killers. Now he’s writing about power and politics ­– which sometimes reminds him of the old crime beat. He joined the Daily News in 2005. And yes, he knows you’re not quite sure how to pronounce his last name. E-mail tips to gambacd@phillynews.com
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Jan Ransom, a native New Yorker, joined the Daily News in 2010 after graduating from Howard University. She has since written about the difficulty of filing police complaints, tax deadbeats and life after violent home invasions. She joined the Daily News City Hall Bureau in 2011 and has plunged headfirst into reporting on administration budget battles and City Council shenanigans. E-mail tips to ransomj@phillynews.com
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Sean Collins Walsh is from Bucks County and went to Northwestern University. He joined the Daily News copy desk in 2012 and now covers the Nutter administration. Before that, he interned at papers including The New York Times, The Dallas Morning News and The Seattle Times. E-mail tips to walshSE@phillynews.com
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