Council Hears City Manager Report on Grand Jury’s Findings into the DFD

City Manager Strongly Differs with Aaronson on Substance and Tone of Findings

The Davis City Council very late on Tuesday night and early on Wednesday morning finally got to ask key questions of investigator Bob Aaronson who was charged with the duty of conducting an independent investigation into a series of findings by the Yolo County Grand Jury that was released in June.

The city led by City Manager Bill Emlen and City Attorney Harriet Steiner came to the basic conclusion that they would potentially face liability if they allowed the elected Davis City Council to read the full report. This was borne out by implications from the Union President Bobby Wiest that the employees had an expectation of confidentiality (apparently even from the city council) and that efforts to release the full report even in closed session to the City Council would be met with a lawsuit.

That decision, which Bob Aaronson disagreed with in a nuanced way upon questioning, meant that the city council was left reading a redacted report and the public was left to read only the City Manager’s summary of the issue. As we learned, the City Manager and the investigator had somewhat different interpretations of the facts.

As Mr. Aaronson put it at the onset:

“Bill is sort of a glass half full sort of guy when it comes to city operations, it’s my impression, and I tend to a glass half empty sort of guy.”

It was City Attorney Harriet Steiner’s view that the city council was not entitled to see the full report as it was a personnel document. The city council’s job is to review the performance of the city manager and the city manager has the primary responsibility of hiring and firing personnel.

Emlen told the council that he did not see any further formal role for the council to play in this matter after they received this report. He also would not, upon questioning from Councilmember Heystek, rule out taking further personnel action.

“At this point, I would defer from answering that question.”

The question of confidentiality has long been a key, despite the general recognition it seems that the Fire Department is well aware of who spoke to Emlen and what they told him.

Mr. Aaronson was asked the degree to which employees were promised confidentiality. His response was that he laid out the process for them exactly how he saw this playing out. About 30 percent of the people who were interviewed by Mr. Aaronson had a concern about confidentiality—they were primarily concerned with retaliation.

“I tried to assure them that their identities and the specific things that they said connected with their identities would not go in a final report.”

He said further,

“I explained to them that I could not guarantee whether or not the interviews would be confidential. But that I would make every effort from my perspective to make sure that no one’s identity connected with negative information was going to be revealed.”

Union President Bobby Wiest disagreed stating that the employees believed that this was a confidential process and he strongly suggested that any effort to release the full report even to the council would be viewed with an invocation of the Firefighters Bill of Rights (which he characterized as similar to the counterpart document with the police officers) and hinted strongly that the city would face a lawsuit.

Bill Emlen suggested that the only names and identities revealed in the report were the same ones revealed in the original grand jury report.

The matter of confidentiality however only matters if there is a need for the council to see the full report. A three to two majority on the council in December voted not to see the full report. And that view held on Wednesday morning despite evidence that became clear there was a strong difference of opinion between Mr. Emlen and Mr. Aaronson on the tone of the findings.

Councilmember asked when Aaronson viewed the redacted the report—it was after the council reviewed the redacted report. Aaronson said that he had no involvement in the preparation of the redacted report.

So the question really boiled down to what the differences in the report were. Councilmember Stephen Souza got at this point with his opening question asking for Mr. Aaronson to characterize the differences in the “essence” of his report from the city manager’s summary.

“I think there are three bases for what I perceive as the differences between my report and the city manager’s summary of my report. The first one is a simple difference, if you reduce a library’s volume by 70 to 80 books it contains, it’s still a library but it’s a different library. When you take information out, it’s hard for there not to be a loss. So there are nuances there are statements and contexts that to me were important that were taken out for the sake of brevity.

The second issue which is also unavoidable—from my perspective the components of my report that touch on personnel matters were essential. Some of them I think go directly to the heart of the more consequential issues. So to eliminate them by its nature changes what the report is.

And then the third thing is, and it’s my impression, Bill is sort of a glass half full sort of guy when it comes to city operations, it’s my impression, and I tend to a glass half empty sort of guy. Those are the ways that I try to articulate how I see there are some differences.”

Bill Emlen and Bob Aaronson upon a question from Don Saylor described very different “most consequential” issues identified in this report. Mr. Emlen said he was very concerned about the public perception of the sleeping at the first station issue, off duty activities, and promotional process issues. Each one he couched in terms that mitigated the severity of the findings—suggesting that he was relieved.

“Overall I’d have to say that the fact that we were able to get more information and get clarity on what the grand jury had indicated on some of these factual areas was also useful. I think it was important for the public to know those things.”

Mr. Aaronson identified three significant issues: favoritism/ retaliation, promotional process, and leadership style.

Mr. Saylor quotes from page four of the report:

“There’s no proof or incidence of retaliation or a hostile work environment.”

Mr. Aaronson responds:

“What my report states is that other than the promotional process which I investigated, and members of the department felt there was favoritism reflected in that, other than that, I did not go and investigate the incidents that were presented to me by employees claiming that it was retaliation or favoritism.”

Why did he not investigate these claims? Primarily time considerations and money dictated the decision here.

“My report might have been more accurate if I intimated that I might have heard a dozen or a dozen and a half individual incidents where people described to me a circumstance that they ascribed favoritism or retaliation.”

Mr. Saylor continues:

“City Manager, your report says there is no proof or incidence of retaliation or hostile work environment is that an accurate assessment?”

Mr. Emlen:

“We have no specific proof, obviously there are folks who have perspectives that were related to Bob, describing potential situations but there’s no hard evidence and to get there would take a long time and we may be no farther in the end.”

This is a key and illuminating exchange. In essence, what the City Manager asserts in his report is deceptive. He suggests there is no proof, but that is really because he does not seek out proof rather than him seeking out proof but not finding any.

Indeed this is not the only instance where this comes up, with regard to political activities:

“The Grand Jury Report suggested potentially inappropriate political activities and donations made by firefighters and the union. Firefighters, as members of a union, have an absolute constitutional right to participate in activities and provide donations, provided they do not do so on City time or as official representatives of the City. The report finds no instances of wrongdoing…”

Apparently Mr. Emlen’s words: “no instances of wrongdoing” does not mean exoneration, only that Mr. Aaronson lacked the time and resources to investigate these claims further.

This is extremely misleading to the public.

At another point, Mr. Emlen suggested that the number of employees with various grievances about the department was very small. A side discussion erupted on the meaning of the term grievance, but that missed the bigger point that the small number aggrieved was actually about 20% according to Mr. Emlen which is not a small number, in fact it is quite high.

Furthermore, the issue of frequency of the drinking issue came up. Mr. Emlen suggested it was infrequent and coincided around parties and celebrations. Chief Rose Conroy and Bobby Wiest also suggested it was very few, that the practice has been stopped, and it was done for a safety concern.

However, Mr. Aaronson suggested that the number was something like half a dozen to a dozen times per year often occurring with multiple members of the department.

Frankly this issue was never as concerning to me as the issue of work environment, promotions, and political activities. While it is inappropriate to use city facilities for this purpose, it is preferable to some alternatives such as firefighters driving while drunk endangering themselves and the public.

Both Mr. Wiest and Chief Conroy spoke at length. Chief Conroy flatly denied the allegations except for a single incident of “badging.”

The council majority–all of whom were endorsed by the fire fighters and received large amounts of money for their most recent campaigns–took the view that Mr. Emlen did. The most important finding was that the operations of the department are exemplary.

As the report reads:

“Perhaps the single largest unaddressed area is the quality of service DFD provides to the city of Davis and its residents and visitors. The Davis Fire Department receives very, very high customer satisfaction results from community surveys. Our firefighters are skilled, experienced and welltrained. Their equipment and facilities are meticulously maintained. As well, Chief Conroy and the firefighters’ union have been increasingly successful in building a partnership unusual in the fire service, to the extent that the Davis Fire Department has become a model for fire service organizations regionally and nationally.”

To their credit, both Councilmembers Greenwald and Heystek took opposing viewpoints on the report, although they did concur with their colleagues about the high quality of service.

From my perspective the problems I had with the process have if anything been confirmed by the report and presentation. It is clear that Mr. Emlen did have a “glass half full” perspective that led him to downplay major findings and even distort the extent to which the process may have exonerated the department.

Moreover there is a larger unanswered question and it Sue Greenwald brought it up a bit when she asked if the council’s only recourse was to fire Bill Emlen.

At one point, Councilmember Heystek asked the City Manager if this problem was a known flashpoint, why it wasn’t dealt with sooner. His answer was that they had just become aware of this through the process. But Chief Conroy hadn’t. She knew all along and did nothing to alleviate a problem that was a flashpoint.

With the union hours bank, she claimed the usage was tracked but not recorded. However, that is generally what it means to track them–record them so that others may oversee their usage.

There are countless examples of processes and practices where good accountability practices are simply not followed by the Fire Chief and they appear to have directly led to the problems that have arisen here.

At some point, however, this responsiblity falls onto Bill Emlen’s shoulders as the City Manager. For me the remaining question is what did Bill Emlen know about these problems and when did he know them? Neither answer is good actually. If he knew about them in advance, then it is a problem because he did not act. If he did know about them until this report and the Grand Jury report, the question should focus on why not?

What is clear is that this issue is over with from the public’s perspective. No one on the council seemed interested in pushing the matter past this week and no one seems that interested in further pursuing it–either because they do not support doing so or there are not the votes to do so.

In the end, the people of Davis can be assured that the fire department does its job well, but also yields tremendous influence on city policies as it consumes a larger and larger portion of the city’s payroll and general fund.

—David M. Greenwald reporting

About The Author

David Greenwald is the founder, editor, and executive director of the Davis Vanguard. He founded the Vanguard in 2006. David Greenwald moved to Davis in 1996 to attend Graduate School at UC Davis in Political Science. He lives in South Davis with his wife Cecilia Escamilla Greenwald and three children.

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16 Comments

  1. SODAite

    Did anyone think it strange that Ruth allowed so many speakers on the Gaza topic…and some for two and even three times to speak. Cynically, could it have partly been to delay the time for the Grand Jury discussion? It seemed so unlike her previous allotment of time for public comment.And a question about Aronson’s report: was the full report shown to the Fire Chief and the Union? If not, was only the CM and City Atty shown the full report? I would think based on the allegations and ‘perceptions’ that if the personnel issues were shown to the Fire Dept management, that would be more damaging to the employees who came forward than showing to the CC…..it would seem that the report could have coded the interviews to protect privacy….we do it all the time in medicine for confidentiality. All in all, I wonder what the $35K was worth; it did not seem to change the defensiveness of either the CM or Chief……

  2. Anonymous

    There is City Council precedent for members receiving investigative reports of complaints on city department actions. Council members were sworn to secrecy on the contents, but they were able to read the report. Ask some retired council members about this.If …specific proof… is the standard the City Manager requires to support an allegation, please have him give specific proof for the following claim he made: …. . . the Davis Fire Department has become a model for fire service organizations regionally and nationally….

  3. Unhappy

    What a colossal waste of time and money. It seems that the only thing that will change is that drunk fire fighters will no longer sleep it off at the fire station. This could have been handled by a memo from the Fire Chief long ago.Why have the City Council request and pay for an investigation, in response to a negative report from the Yolo County Grand Jury, only to be denied access to the report? We really need to find people who will be more responsive to the community’s concerns. I am more critical of the individual fire fighters and their families with regards to political activity. Their acquiescence to the demands of the Union to contribute money to particular candidates and how they vote is really troubling, but I understand how difficult it would be to be the only person who didn’t appear on the campaign finance disclosure forms as contributing. I once asked a wife of a fire fighter who she was supporting for City Council. She responded that she hadn’t been told by the Union who to vote for yet. I consider my vote as my own and not for use by someone else, so I was fairly astounded by this statement.

  4. Anonymous

    I hope you realize that the reason the Davis Fire Department is such a powerful political entity is because of the campaign contribution limits. Delivering labor and money from a large group of individuals becomes a lot more valuable when you can’t get those services through contributions.

  5. Rich Rifkin

    …The council majority–all of whom were endorsed by the fire fighters and received large amounts of money for their most recent campaigns–took the view that Mr. Emlen did….I don’t know if the firefighters walked precints or otherwise helped out Ruth Asmundson — I don’t believe they did — but it is not true that she was funded by them. If you click here, you can see all of Ruth’s contributors to her latest campaign.I think it’s worth noting that the firefighter’s union pours its efforts and its money into city council campaigns only in the years when their contract will be up the following year (and negotiated the year of the campaign). In the 2008 race, they tried to buy three seats on the council — and were successful with two. Their contract is up this year. In 2004, they batted 100%, and got a great deal for themselves in 2005.

  6. Rich Rifkin

    For those new to the issue, it’s worth understanding that no other employee groups in the city of Davis actively takes part in city council elections or tries to elect candidates to the council who will then favor them in negotiations. If you look at campaign contributions to city council candidates from past elections, it is usually the case that there will be no contributions from non-DFD city employees to city council candidates, while the firefighters (80% of whom live outside of Davis) give maximum contributions to their favored candidates.

  7. My View

    Bill Emlen’s …nuanced… whitewash is to be expected. This fiasco happened on his watch, and involved his employees. It is the height of conflict of interest for him to be writing the final report. Of course he is going to slant it in his favor. Duh!One thing that still bothers me is the lack of discussion about the cozy relationship between Chief Conroy and Bobby Wiest of the Union, and its influence on decisionmaking. In other words the perception that Bobby Weist is too much a part of promotion decisions? Can anyone speak to this, or am I off here?I have to say Bobby Weist came off sounding inarticulate, a bit of a bully, and very defensive. Chief Conroy seemed very disturbed at Aaronson’s less than flattering words, expecting I think to be completely exonerated, which did not happen.If I were to sum things up in my own mind, I think the DFD probably does a reasonably good job, but that they most definitely have personnel issues that still need to be resolved. Chief Conroy’s style is abrasive, not always fair, and Bobby Weist is overly involved in any decisionmaking with regard to personnel matters. Bill Emlen is a hands off city manager, who is reactive only. And he does not want anyone, including the city council, messing with his decisions.Sue and Lamar have a good point – tweak the city management model a bit to ensure an investigative report like this is accessible to City Council members. Harriet Steiner is nothing but a shill for Bill Emlen, IMHO, so I do not trust her legal opinion on this particular issue. Lamar and Sue should push for regular updates from Bill Emlen, to see that he is carrying out his own recommendations. Otherwise the whistleblowers are in for a rough ride!

  8. Anonymous

    Good on Aronson! He actually did his job and did it professionally. Not his problem that Davis has a smug little circle of minor league politicians who choose to spin, whitwash and deny any substantiated findings which implicates any of their buddies, or their buddie’s buddies, etc. ad nauseum. That is until a taxpayers lawsuit happens, in which case I expect their silence to be deafening. Of course they’ll say they’re under orders (from Harriet S.) to keep mum. It’s all so predictable that it’s depressing.

  9. Anonymous

    It’s sad. After 9-11, firemen were elevated to the status of gods, now they seem to be nothing but petty fraternity boys using the equipment to pick up whores in Sac and the firehouse in davis to sleep off alcohol. Is it impossible to find adults for this job? It pays pretty well.

  10. Rich Rifkin

    …I know they had doorhangers with their endorsed candidates Asmundson and Levy….Nonetheless, no firefighters are listed as direct contributors to Ruth or Mike. Levy’s campaign was poorly financed — so it’s odd, if Local 3494 supported Levy, none of them gave him money, as they did to their chosen candidates in 2004 and 2008.

  11. David M. Greenwald

    Rich:…As members of the Davis Fire Department, we trust that Mike will ensure we have the resources needed to keep our city safe, putting public protection above politics….~ Bobby WeistPresident, Davis Firefighters Local 3494 Organizations:…- Davis Firefighters Local 3494Levy Endorsements

  12. Rich Rifkin

    …The online campaign statements that Rich Rifkin refers to do not cover the entire 2006 election season….I did not know that when I looked at the DCN numbers (and posted info here based on them). It hadn’t occurred to me. However, now that you point that out, I looked, and I believe you are correct — and therefore, my assumptions about firefighters not giving directly to Ruth and Mike is probably wrong. If you go to each candidate at DCN and sort the contributions by date, you will see they end in mid-March. However, the 2006 election was in June, and thus 2-2.5 months of contributions are not listed.If I have the time, I’ll check with the city clerk, see if firefighters gave after mid-March and update on this thread.

  13. Anonymous

    Again, The davis firefighters union, like the majority of public employee unions, should be done away with. That will save the taxpayers a lot of money. The firefighters and their union, in this city, are nothing but a leech on the taxpayer. Firefighters should have their pay reduced significantly. The City should also terminate the head leech, fire chief rose conroy, immediately.

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