
News
Volunteer Firefighter and EMS Personnel Job Protection Act (H.R. 1643) Introduced
Provides Job Protection to Volunteers Responding to Presidentially-Declared Disasters
NVFC Chairman Philip C. Stittleburg speaks at a press conference outside the United States Capitol regarding the reintroduction of the Volunteer Firefighter and EMS Personnel Job Protection Act as original co-sponsors Congressmen Bill Pascrell (front left) and Randy Kuhl (immediately to the right) look on. Not pictured is original co-sponsor Congressman Mike Castle and the bill's sponsor Congressman Robert Andrews. In addition to the members of Congress, close to 70 firefighters and EMTs attended the event.
Congressman Rob Andrews (D-NJ) introduced the Volunteer Firefighter and EMS Personnel Job Protection Act of 2007 (H.R. 1643) on March 22, along with original co-sponsors Michael Castle (R-DE), Randy Kuhl (R-NY), and Bill Pascrell (D-NJ). The bill would provide up to 14 days per calendar year of job protection for volunteer emergency services personnel who respond to a Presidentially-declared disaster in an official capacity.
"Volunteer first responders shouldn't be put in the position of having to choose between their jobs and responding to a major disaster," said NVFC Chairman Philip C. Stittleburg. "Passage of H.R. 1643 would eliminate the threat of termination or demotion."
The legislation would also reduce pressure on emergency managers who rely heavily on the availability and performance of the more than 800,000 volunteer first responders around the country. Pre-emergency planners must know what assets they have available to them so the deployment process can move as smoothly and quickly as possible.
The bill provides up to 14 days of job protection per calendar year. If additional aid is needed after that period of time, a new group of first responders can be brought in to replace the ones who have exhausted their job protection limit.
Under H.R. 1643, employers would not be required to compensate employees for time missed, and employees would be required to make a reasonable effort to notify their employers that they will miss work. Employees would be required to continue to provide reasonable updates over the course of their absence.
The legislation only applies to emergency responders acting in an official capacity. "Self-responders" would not be eligible for job protection under H.R. 1643 and employers have the right to ask for documentation from the official supervising the response to verify that the employee was involved in an official capacity.
"I'd like to thank Congressman Andrews for introducing the Volunteer Firefighter and EMS Personnel Job Protection Act as well as Congressmen Castle, Kuhl, and Pascrell for their strong support," said Stittleburg.
The NVFC urges you to contact your U.S. Representative and ask them to cosponsor H.R. 1643. Senator Tom Carper (D-DE) is expected to introduce companion legislation to H.R. 1643 in the Senate in coming weeks.

