Sunday, February 22, 2015

The Charlotte Observer Gets In On The Jeff Dulin - Facebook Posting

From The Charlotte Observer's Editorial Staff:

It is very possible that Charlotte Fire Department deputy chief Jeff Dulin will be fired as soon as Monday for sharing on Facebook an offensive image about former Olympian Bruce Jenner.

City Manager Ron Carlee has left himself little room to choose any other action.

Carlee fired Charlotte fire investigator Crystal Eschert in November for a Facebook post made in the wake of the Ferguson, Mo., police shooting. In that post, Eschert questioned whether the White House and civil rights advocates would have spoken up if the Ferguson victim were white. “So tired of hearing it’s a racial thing,” Eschert wrote. “If you are a thug and worthless to society, it’s not race – You’re just a waste no matter what religion, race or sex you are!”

Carlee said then that Eschert’s post was “inherently discriminatory” and “inflammatory.” The comments, he said, were in conflict “with our responsibility to serve all members of the community.”

The same is true of Dulin’s post, in which he shares an image that shows Jenner on the cover of a Wheaties box in 1976 juxtaposed with a photoshopped recent image of Jenner – who is believed to be transitioning to a woman – on a box of Froot Loops cereal.

It’s offensive and hurtful. It’s harmful to the city’s image. Perhaps worst of all in Carlee’s mind, it allows a group of people to wonder if the fire department or city might discriminate against them in some way.

But Dulin, a 32-year department veteran, should not be fired for his post. Eschert should not have been fired for hers.

Make no mistake, both posts were out-of-bounds, and both posters should have known that the minute you hit send on Facebook or anything else, what’s private is no longer private. And no, it doesn’t matter that Dulin was merely sharing someone else’s offensive creation. If you repost it, you endorse it, unless you signal otherwise.

But did this post, as well as Eschert’s, rise to the level of a firing offense? No. Both merit a suspension, along with sensitivity training and a public apology.

That didn’t happen with Eschert, who says her firing was in retaliation for her complaints about the quality of renovations at a Fire Department building on Graham Street. Carlee and department officials deny this, but her termination – the first for violating the city’s social media policy – seemed excessive.

Certainly, judgments like these are subjective. Some Facebook posts could be grounds for dismissal, like any abhorrent speech would be. But by setting the bar for firing so low for Eschert, the city has done so with all of its employees. One-time poor choices will result in termination when they should result in severe but lesser punishment.

Carlee should hit the pause button now. Suspend Dulin. Give Eschert back her job. Craft a new approach to social media and speech that punishes mistakes, but does so more reasonably.

Cedar's Take: Well the Observer is dead on, except they missed the real point here.

Eschert wasn't fired for her posting it was simply retribution for her speaking up out about how CFD Chief Jon Hannan runs the department.

Further it is painfully clear that she can't return to work at CFD, any job she would be given would be nothing more than "window watching". Charlotte City Council woman Claire Fallon has the correct approach clean house because "the fish sinks from the head".

As for Facebook, if the Charlotte "Local Media" would crowd source this, they would find 100's of Dulin like posts. Fire, CMPD, CMUD and CMS staff "own" Facebook and the posts range from racist and bigoted do down right scary.

Trouble is you can't fire them all. The cost of training each firefighter and police officer is upwards of $100,000.00.

Carlee's shortsightedness, coupled with Jon Hannan's temperament, lack of leadership skills and deceit have created an insane environment of distrust.  

How long can they both hold on? We shall see.

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

Cedar's take is dead on. Karma is a B. Thanks Cedar for helping Crystal.

Anonymous said...

Wonder if Dulin's sex scandal will pop up in all of this? He should have been fired then. Oh, wait, didn't the Chief Fire Investigator have an affair also and he did not get fired.

Anonymous said...

Oh this is getting REAL good..Good job Cedar!!

Anonymous said...

Cedar Post you are the bomb! These folks in the city mangers office and command with the fire dept are a mess! What is going on in Charlotte. No wonder the HORNETS got the name back. Them folks stirring a HORNETS NEST! BAM THEY GOT STUNG. Wonder how many more will.

Anonymous said...

Was that the City intern?

Anonymous said...

This is the way Jon Hannan runs the department. There is no real policy he just does as he F-ing pleases.

Right out of the Rodney Monroe play book.

Anonymous said...

The posts by both Eschert and Dulin were equally offensive, albeit targeted against different sectors of the community. Each of these public service employees have caused, by their in appropriate postings, a portion of the community they are meant to serve to potentially call into question whether they will be impartial and non-discriminatory in carrying out their duties.
Firing both individuals is, assuming they have otherwise good records, in my opinion too severe a penalty. It has been suggested that unpaid suspension time, a public apology and attendance at "sensitivity training" would be appropriate --- and I agree.
Mr. Dulin has already issued a public statement accepting full responsibility for his inappropriate action and offering an apology. Assuming, after any other CFD-determined penalty (e.g. unpaid suspension time) is levied, he is permitted to keep his position--- Mrs. Eschert should be afforded the same opportunity. That is, to "publicly" accept full responsibility and offer apology for her inappropriate posting ---and take any other CFD-determined penalty (e.g. unpaid suspension time)---- at which point she should be reinstated to her prior position.