Top Stories
Racist radio message in Houston Fire Department
|
8:07 AM on 07/09/2009 |
| Join Our Mailing List |
LISA BALDWIN
Houston's Inspector General launched an investigation into the source of the racist message on the city's radio channel.
Houston Fire Department spokeswoman Alicia White said firefighters heard the message on the department's Trac 2 channel about 7 a.m. Wednesday. Fire Capt. Otis Jordan, president of the city's black firefighters association, said that the broadcast contained a vulgar message aimed at black firefighters.
Fire Chief Phil Boriskie said the Houston Police Department is also investigating.
"Quite frankly, I'm mad. I'm mad as (expletive)," Boriskie said. "Someone or some group hijacked seven to eight seconds of airtime of a public safety-dedicated channel."
Boriskie said the message most likely came from an outside source.
Firefighters Jane Dreacott and Paula Keys said they found racist and sexual graffiti throughout their living quarters at Fire Station 54 on Tuesday morning.
The attorneys who represent the women said they want the Department of Justice and the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission to investigate the incident as a hate crime.
"There was graffiti on the walls, above their desks and all of their pictures, on their desks and inside their lockers. It was all defaced," attorney Elizabeth Pannili said.
Boriskie said it was a criminal offense and those responsible will lose their jobs.
Some close to Dreacott and Keys said the women recently complained about men urinating in the sinks and on the walls of their sleeping quarters.
"The message is clear: You're going to have to tolerate a sexist environment. You're going to have to try to get along with harassment. It goes along with being one of the few women at the station," attorney Joe Ahmad said.
The attorneys said Dreacott is particularly distraught. She found photographs of her daughter, who died in a car accident, defaced in her locker.
"They wrote the word 'die,'" Ahmad said.
Houston Mayor Bill White released a statement about the matter:
"Any form of racial or gender discrimination demeaning one group of people is unacceptable," he wrote. "We won't tolerate it in the fire department or anywhere else within the city. Before we judge and generalize about it, we need to get the facts and we will get to the bottom of it. I have confidence in the professionalism of the [Office of Inspector General] to do that."
Dreacott and Keys will speak out publicly about the incident Thursday morning.
Follow theGrio on Facebook & Twitter!
-
Glenn Beck calls Roland Martin an 'idiot' over Super Bowl tweets controversy
-
Rick Santorum picks up Missouri, Minnesota wins
-
Charles Dickens characters: Were they drawn from real-life black Londoners?
-
Brandy and Monica's new song: 'It All Belongs to Me'
-
Darden Restaurants to be sued for discrimination
-
Slideshow: Mo' money, mo' problems! 20 celeb tax cheats
-
The top 10 greatest black quarterbacks of all time (SLIDESHOW)
-
The 10 most memorable presidential campaign themes (SLIDESHOW)
-
Angelo Dundee dead: Legendary trainer for Muhammad Ali, Sugar Ray Leonard dies at 90
-
Black stars shine at 2012 SAG Awards (SLIDESHOW)
-
Black America must be at the table in the battle against HIV/AIDS
-
Nicki Minaj and 'Marilyn Monroe': Is she perpetuating white female beauty standard?
-
HIV/AIDS and Black America: How we can end the epidemic
-
Are black conservatives making a comeback?
-
Super Bowl 2012: Will Chad Ochocinco have a chance to shine in the big game?
Popular Topics
- Barack Obama: 1778 Stories
- Music: 746 Stories
- Hip Hop: 623 Stories
- Basketball: 450 Stories
- Economy: 440 Stories
- Congress: 429 Stories
- Football: 429 Stories
- NFL: 424 Stories
- NBA: 408 Stories
- Unemployment: 405 Stories
- Haiti: 394 Stories
- Film: 382 Stories
- New York: 378 Stories
- Election2012: 372 Stories
- Michelle Obama: 359 Stories
- Michael Jackson: 358 Stories
- Republicans: 357 Stories
- Murder: 349 Stories
- Democrats: 336 Stories
- Education: 304 Stories



COMMENT NOW
print