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Cincinnati mayor declares state of emergency to prevent low firefighter staffing due to COVID

Bill Rinehart
/
WVXU

The city of Cincinnati says it has enough firefighters and first responders right now, but rising numbers of COVID cases could present a problem. Mayor John Cranley has declared a state of emergency, ordering the city manager to take whatever action necessary to protect the public.

"I was briefed yesterday by the fire chief and the city manager about the fact that so many of our first responders are positive for COVID and/or required to quarantine because they're close to somebody with COVID, and that's having a real impact on staffing levels," he says.

City employees must get a COVID vaccination or submit to regular testing. Cranley says more than 95% of the fire department is vaccinated.

Cranley says between COVID cases and holiday vacations, response time and readiness could be in jeopardy. He says the fire chief believes they have enough people in place through the holiday weekend for now.

"But if they have to, they can do mandatory overtime. They can do vacation cancelations, things like that," Cranely says. "They obviously want to limit the number of things they do like that, but we still have to put the citizens first."

Cranley says he consulted with mayor-elect Aftab Pureval, who agreed the emergency should be in place for 60 days, which would expire well after the beginning of his term.

Bill Rinehart started his radio career as a disc jockey in 1990. In 1994, he made the jump into journalism and has been reporting and delivering news on the radio ever since.