Labor Spat Stops New Orleans FFs' Mardi Gras Parade Tradition

Over the years, New Orleans fire apparatus have rolled at the end of each Carnival parade. But that could end this year as the city and firefighters battle over voluntary overtime and staffing.
Feb. 14, 2020
4 min read

A longtime Mardi Gras tradition is in jeopardy because of the labor fight between New Orleans firefighters and Mayor LaToya Cantrell’s administration: the fire trucks that roll at the end of each Carnival parade.

Firefighters’ union president Aaron Mischler said Friday that fire truck crews have been instructed to conduct safety inspections on floats and flambeauxs before each parade — but then return to their stations to answer calls for service rather than trail the processions.

RELATED: 

New Orleans Firefighters Won't Work Some Overtime Shifts
  • New Orleans Fire Chief Cancels Vacation for Firefighters
  • A screenshot of an email to various New Orleans Fire Department members from a deputy chief, which the union provided Friday, says that “there will be no rear unit at the end of any parade during this Mardi Gras season” by orders of Superintendent Tim McConnell.

    Unveiled as the first of two major weekends of Carnival parades ramps up, the email doesn’t provide a reason for taking out what, for decades, has signified the end of a parade to the crowds.

    But the switch comes as firefighters — protesting various labor grievances — are refusing voluntary overtime shifts which the city has relied on to patch over a staffing level that the administration claims is 60 firefighters short of the department’s authorized strength.

    Cantrell’s administration didn’t immediately comment Friday, saying McConnell would be able to address questions about the matter at an 11:15 a.m. news conference. McConnell has said the union’s stance is forcing NOFD officials to come up with ways to ensure the city’s various stations are adequately staffed.

    One measure, which was announced in a directive Tuesday, was to cancel firefighters’ vacations and other leave indefinitely, with possibly few exceptions. Mischler and other union leaders believe pulling the fire trucks out of the end of parades is another.

    Firefighters will still be ensuring all floats have the required escape ladders and fire extinguishers aboard prior to each parade. And a phalanx of police officers and paramedics along the city’s parade routes will still be available to respond to medical emergencies and disturbances.

    Yet Mischler said having a fire truck rolling along with parades can save precious minutes in the event of a float fire — which aren’t unheard of on vehicles covered in flammable papier-mache and lights — or a mishap associated with the flambeaus, who wield open flames as part of the processions. Those trucks can also respond to blazes which may erupt at houses or businesses which are cut off from their usual stations by the crowds and street closures which accompany parades.

    “This concerns me because … the (parade) unit would be able to respond quickly,” Mischler said. “Because of the crowds and difficulty of getting around the city during a parade, you want those elements in place.”

    This all comes a week after the union met with members of Cantrell’s administration to demand changes to an overtime policy that they argue defers or denies them the pay they have earned.

    Union leaders are also pushing for changes to other policies to address pensions, promotions and pay rates for odd-duty details. But overtime has been a sticking point — union officials say members have had to work 90 or more hours a week to make up for understaffing.

    McConnell has countered that some of the changes would cost nearly $5 million a year and can’t be granted immediately due to budget constraints. But Mischler has said the union merely wants the city to sign agreements to work the overtime changes into the 2021 budget, to propose pension changes to the state Legislature next year and to sign a contract with the union, which last had a contract in 2011.

    The union is also seeking a temporary court injunction to block the city from enforcing vacation cancelations, a request which is set to be heard by a Civil District Court judge next week.

    The directive targeted by the injunction also empowers the department to force firefighters to work overtime, which is typically only done in emergencies. But McConnell said he doesn’t expect needing to do that as long as firefighters showed up to their regular shifts, which the union says its members will do.

    ———

    ©2020 The Times-Picayune | The New Orleans Advocate

    Visit The Times-Picayune | The New Orleans Advocate at www.nola.com

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

    Sign up for our eNewsletters
    Get the latest news and updates

    Voice Your Opinion!

    To join the conversation, and become an exclusive member of Firehouse, create an account today!