Firefighters’ benefits divide northern Arizona city

In the days after a wildfire killed 19 members of an elite firefighting team, the Arizona city where they were based banded together in a series of moving public memorials and tributes, overwhelmingly united in its support of the men and their families.

That unity quickly has faded since residents learned Prescott is not paying full-time benefits to all of the families of the firefighters who died June 30.

Now, leaders of a city nicknamed “Everybody’s Hometown” are receiving both vicious emails and ones commending them for not letting emotion get in the way. Grieving widows have lashed out at city leaders in public meetings, news conferences and national TV appearances.

“I was really proud to live in Prescott because you saw people coming together, and now it’s just embarrassing,” resident Julie Abel said.

The source of the dispute is the fact that 13 of the firefighters were classified as temporary employees and not entitled to full survivors’ benefits. As a result, they receive smaller death benefits than the families of the six firefighters classified as full time.

The widow of fallen firefighter Andrew Ashcraft brought attention to the issue by making public pleas to city officials, saying her husband worked full-time hours and, therefore, deserved the more lucrative benefits.

“There were 19 men that perished in that fire and for whatever reason, there are people that feel that some of them don’t deserve to be treated in a way that the others do,” Juliann Ashcraft said at a news conference outside the courthouse.

From the city’s point of view, the law is clear. The 13 firefighters were not classified as full time, and the city said changing the rules after the fact would be illegal and also cost Prescott millions of dollars over the lifetime of the firefighters’ dependents.

“It’s easy to get emotional, and everybody wants to do the right thing,” city spokesman Pete Wertheim said. “But what is the right thing? Well, for the city it’s limited by the law. And we’re fully complying with it.”

Last year, President Barack Obama made federal health insurance benefits available to thousands of temporary wildland firefighters and their families after a South Dakota-based Hotshot crew petitioned for the change. That benefit did not extend to the Granite Mountain Hotshots because the crew was employed by Prescott.

In Arizona, House Speaker Andy Tobin has said he’ll introduce a bill in the upcoming legislative session to provide benefits retroactively to the Granite Mountain Hotshots and any emergency responder who dies on state lands in the future.

Somewhat lost in the emotion of the debate is that benefits for all the families of the Granite Mountain Hotshots also will include private donations.

Each of firefighters’ families will receive a tax-free $328,000 lump sum from the federal government, Social Security benefits, workers compensation and free tuition for their children at Arizona universities. The families of the six full-time employees also get health insurance, an increased life insurance payment and the men’s annual salaries.

Outside organizations and community donations have been filling the families’ immediate needs.

The 100 Club of Arizona paid out a minimum of $15,000 in cash to each of the men’s families and covered remaining burial expenses and associated travel costs. Of the $3 million the group has taken in so far, more than $1.5 million has been spent, marketing specialist Ciara Franklin said.