Houston fire cadets getting $8,000 pay raise year after Prop B fight

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Friday, February 21, 2020
66 HFD Cadets finally sworn in after Prop B limbo
Sixty-six Houston Fire cadets whose careers were in limbo over the implementation of Prop B pay parity, only to be laid off from the department, have been sworn in.

HOUSTON, Texas (KTRK) -- Houston fire cadets are getting a raise of nearly $8,000 a year.

Mayor Sylvester Turner approved the bump that will pay cadets $36,000. Their previous pay was $28,023.

The pay raise was requested by Houston Fire Chief Sam Pena, who commended the mayor for approving the bump in a statement:

"The Fire Cadet classification is outside of the fire collective bargaining group and the pay rate had been stagnant since 2001. I want to thank Mayor Turner for approving the requested increase. Here in Houston, we are up against strong competition not only from surrounding fire departments who are moving from volunteer to paid firefighters, but from an overall strong labor market, a robust economy and more Houstonians with jobs today. The approved Cadet pay rate is a significant increase, but in a competitive market, it is an investment in attracting and recruiting good people."

The pay raise is a remarkable reverse of fortune for the cadets, who were caught in the middle of voter-approved Prop B's legal limbo last year.

Prop B would have given city firefighters pay parity with the city's police department.

ABC13's Ted Oberg chronicled the ordeal every step of the way, from the moment the pay raises were approved in 2018, to back-and-forth in city hall over instituting the raises, to when Prop B was ruled unconstitutional.

In terms of the cadets, Houston Fire Department last summer swore in 66 of them as official firefighters.

And, in a sign that it wants to add to its ranks, the fire department is welcoming anyone to apply to become a cadet at its HFD Careers website.

The pay raise does not affect Houston firefighters. The last raise actual firefighters received was 1% in 2013. They received no pay increase since then.

The video above is from a previous story.

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