ASSEMBLYMEMBER
PORTANTINO INTRODUCES LEGISLATION PROTECTING FALLEN FEDERAL FIREFIGHTER
FAMILIES
AB 384 (Portantino) Guarantees Educational and Health Benefits to Spouses,
Surviving Children
(SACRAMENTO) -- California’s civilian federal firefighters risk
everything to protect our wild lands from devastating fire, standing
shoulder-to-shoulder with state and local first responders. As we learned
when five US Forest Service firefighters died in the Esperanza Fire,
they also bear the same losses.
Giving these men and women and their families the respect they deserve
is at the heart of legislation introduced this week by Assemblyman Anthony
Portantino (D-La Cañada Flintridge).
The California Fallen Federal Firefighter Survivor Assistance Act of
2007 – AB 384 – guarantees that all California firefighters
– federal as well as local and state – have access to survivor
benefits provided to state and local firefighters under existing law.
“A firefighter is a firefighter, no matter the color of the uniform,”
said Assemblyman Portantino. “Fallen federal firefighters deserve
the same consideration we give our state and local survivor families.”
Specifically, AB 384 guarantees that spouses and surviving children
are able to receive fee waivers from California’s public colleges
and universities – University of California, California State
University and community colleges. It also insures that uninsured spouses
and children have access to a state-funded program to help them gain
medical and dental benefits.
The need for this common-sense legislation was revealed after last
fall’s devastating loss in the Esperanza Fire. Five firefighters
– Captain Mark Loutzenhiser and Engine Operators Jess McLean,
Jason McKay, Daniel Hoover-Najera and Pablo Cerda – died after
their engine was burned during the wind-whipped 24,000 acre blaze. All
five were California residents, working on Engine 57 at the San Jacinto
Ranger Station in Idyllwild.
“The courageous men of US Forest Service Engine 57 were Californians,
fighting on California land, and they died protecting the home of a
fellow Californian,” said Lou Paulson, president of California
Professional Firefighters, the sponsors of AB 384. “Securing these
survivor benefits is the least we can do for those who sacrifice so
much.”
The fallen firefighter family fee waivers for UC, CSU and community
colleges were first enacted in 1999. The health insurance program was
approved in 2004. In each case, the benefits were intended to apply
to all firefighters. However, in the intervening years, these programs
have been administered in a way that excludes the survivors of fallen
federal firefighters who lived, worked, and gave their lives within
the state.
“When a firefighter falls in the line of duty, their families
not only face the sudden loss of a loved one, but a potentially crushing
financial burden,” said Michael Massone, a civilian firefighter
with Federal Fire San Diego.
“We owe it to the memory of those who have fallen to make sure
their families get what they’re entitled to receive, without the
bureaucracy getting in the way.”
AB 384 has bipartisan support and is coauthored by 22 members of the
California Legislature.
By Assembly rules, The California Fallen Federal Firefighter Survivor
Assistance Act of 2007 will be in print for 30 days, after which it
will be assigned to a committee.
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