LOS ANGELES — Former Los Angeles Fire Chief Kristin Crowley in a hearing Tuesday before the City Council that included the 25-year department veteran’s first extensive public comments about the events that led to her firing.
Crowley delivered an impassioned 11-minute plea before the City Council as she appealed Mayor Karen Bass’ decision to dismiss her in the wake of the deadly January wildfires. In the end, the council voted 13-2 to receive and file the appeal, shelving the matter and effectively ending Crowley’s bid for reinstatement.
Crowley needed 10 council members to side with her to be , according to the city charter.
“I am very grateful that I have the opportunity to appeal and to speak my truth,” Crowley said outside City Hall.
“We’re going to push and work to get our people what they need to do their jobs, and to support the community.”
Seated at a table in front of the council, Crowley opened her statements by restating her belief that the department is lacking the resources it needs to protect Los Angeles.
“When we fail to take care of our firefighters, we fail to take care of our communities,” Crowley said.
Bass dismissed Crowley, who remains with the department at a lower rank, for what the mayor deemed to be failures of leadership during Los Angeles’ January fires, including the deadly Palisades Fire on the Los Angeles County coast.
Bass lauded Crowley in the early hours of the fire, but said she later learned that an additional 1,000 firefighters could have been deployed on the day the Palisades Fire started. Bass also said Crowley refused to prepare a report on the fires.
After her initial remarks, Crowley addressed some of those complaints, including the after-action report that was to be filed with the city’s fire commission.
“I will set the record straight on multiple false accusations made against me,” Crowley said. “I did not refuse an after-action report. This is a false accusation. During our discussions about an after-action report, I advised the fire commission about what was best.”
Crowley said she recommended working in collaboration the (FSRI) on a post-fire report.
“They’re already conducting an analysis of windstorm and wildfires,” Crowley said. “In contrast to LAFD, FSRI has resources to conduct a thorough investigation… that will be independent, which is so important as we figure out a way to move forward.”
Crowley also addressed accusations about department staffing. She repeated statements that the department was limited because of fire engines that were sidelined for . Crowley has said budget cuts impacted mechanics and mainly affected that needed repair.
“On the morning of the fire, I did not send home 1,000 firefighters who could have hopped on fire engines,” Crowley said. “We did not have enough apparatus to put them on. Over 100 sat broken down in our maintenance yards.”
Crowley also refuted the mayor’s claims that the chief did not notify her office about the windstorm and potentially life-threatening wildfire conditions.
Firefighters union members spoke in support of Crowley during the meeting’s public comment period.
Several speakers expressed support for the mayor’s decision, which took up the bulk of the meeting’s public comment period.
The last time the council heard an appeal like Crowley’s was in 2005 for an animal services manager, according to the city clerk’s office.
The 10-vote bar was a tough one for Crowley to meet. Four council members stood with Bass when she announced the firing Feb. 21 at City Hall. Another member publicly announced support Tuesday.
Only two have publicly stated opposition to the mayor’s decision.
Councilmember Traci Park, whose district includes Pacific Palisades, called for Crowley to appeal the decision, as had council member Monica Rodriguez, of the San Fernando Valley.
“As a council, we also unanimously approved an outside, independent after-action review,” Park said Tuesday. “The fire department and the city should not be investigating itself following the biggest disaster in our city’s history, nor should it be investigated by a commission of political appointees.”
In a statement following the decision, Crowley described the decision as disappointing but expressed gratitude to those who showed her support.
The LAFD also released a statement after the council hearing.
“The Los Angeles City Fire Department is grateful for Chief Crowley and her leadership during the time she served as Fire Chief,” the agency said. “As the City recovers from the devastating fires, Interim Fire Chief Villanueva will utilize his years of service to ensure collaboration between the LAFD, other City Departments and leaders as the focus is to move forward as one.”
The back-and-forth between the mayor and former chief began in the days after the fires started on Jan. 7, when Bass was on an that she later said , and intensified with Bass’ claims that Crowley did not warn her in advance about the high winds that fanned the Palisades and Eaton wildfires. The windstorm was days in advance of when the fires started in Pacific Palisades and Altadena.
In a statement to NBC4, the LAFD said the department followed all standard preparation procedures.
“Prior to the Palisades Fire, the LAFD emailed two separate media advisories, conducted multiple live and recorded media interviews about the predicted extreme fire weather, and notified City Officials about the upcoming weather event,” the agency said.
to and from Crowley offer some insight into coordination for the windstorm and fires. The messages include correspondence with the city emergency manager and LAPD chief outlining the plan for an emergency operations center ahead of the Palisades Fire and a message from Crowley to regional fire chiefs calling for “anything else you can send us” after the fire started on the LA County coast.
The mayor’s office released a statement about the 350 pages of text messages.
“These documents show that in the day leading up to the fires, Chief Crowley was not in text contact with the Mayor or any member of her staff regarding the coming weather event until after the fires had already broken out,” the mayor’s office said in a statement.
Crowley, elevated to Los Angeles fire chief in 2022 at a time of turmoil in a department consumed by complaints of rampant hazing, harassment and discrimination among its 3,400-member ranks, criticized the city for budget cuts that she said have made it harder for firefighters to do their jobs. Bass has said that the budget cuts did not have an impact on the LAFD’s response to the wildfires.
“My disappointment with this situation is that our chief, the chief chose the wrong time and the wrong place to raise an issue,” Padilla said Tuesday. “Spending time talking to the press to tell her side of the story, which I think is important, versus at the command center during the fires raises major concerns about what proper time should be. And it is because of that that I hope we recognize that this is a Mayor doing what is within her jurisdiction.”
Former Chief Deputy Ronnie Villanueva, a 41-year LAFD veteran, was announced as interim fire chief.
Crowley has been with the LAFD for about 25 years, working her way up through the ranks of the department as a firefighter, paramedic, engineer, fire inspector, captain, battalion chief, assistant chief, deputy chief and chief deputy before earning the top job.