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HENDERSONVILLE, Tenn. (WKRN) -- Upset with their mayor, Hendersonville firefighters and their supporters packed into the city’s council meeting on Tuesday to push for pay raises.
“The police deserve what they had [a raise], but so does the fire department,” said one speaker.
“Yes, this is what we signed up for, but we also came to this job thinking the city of Hendersonville had our back and would pay us a fair living wage so we don’t have to work another job,” said a Hendersonville firefighter.
Four other fire associations showed up to support HFD on Tuesday: Wilson County, Dickson County, Murfreesboro and Gallatin.
Public comment lasted over an hour and, in the end, Mayor Jamie Clary took the microphone and apologized for the recent drama.
“We’ve got an exceptional fire department, one of the best in the state. I had more to say and, honestly, some corrections to make. But I want to move forward. I appreciate the firefighters, I really really do. I’m prepared to respond to everything that’s been said, but I think I need to say nothing more than: I’m truly sorry,” said Clary. “I want peace, we all want peace, and I will work harder and more deliberately for peace.”
This tension between Mayor Clary and the Hendersonville Fire Department has been building for some time, boiling over after the mayor’s State of the City address earlier this month.
While stating their support for Hendersonville police and the raises they recently received, Hendersonville Fire believes they deserve more respect from the city.
An apology from the mayor is a good first step.
“It’s so uplifting for the morale of our firefighters association,” said Matt Elliott, vice president for Hendersonville’s Firefighters Association. “There’s still a lot of work to be done, and we plan to hold [Clary] to that. But we appreciate the mayor validating our anger… we’re looking forward to where it goes from here.”
Where it goes from here is, likely, budget discussions with the city to sort out how HFD can see a raise in the next year. Hendersonville has their next budget workshop in early May.
One key figure who has remained silent throughout this funding feud: longtime fire chief Scotty Bush.
“I’ve been the fire chief for 10 years in May, and my focus has always been on my staff and the citizens of the City of Hendersonville. And I will never stray from that,” Chief Bush told News 2.
Bush did not speak in direct response to Mayor Clary’s apology. Instead, he praised his department for their continued “professionalism and integrity.”
“We got 122 in the department, counting myself. I would match their skills, their interpersonal skills, their abilities to do their jobs, against anybody in the state,” Bush said.
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