Conspiracy among America's Heroes
Anyone who is a manager, supervisor, leader, or involved with human-relations issues needs to read this book, and learn from these truculent life lessons and use them for future reference. Are you willing to take the ethical challenge?
"1112989821"
Conspiracy among America's Heroes
Anyone who is a manager, supervisor, leader, or involved with human-relations issues needs to read this book, and learn from these truculent life lessons and use them for future reference. Are you willing to take the ethical challenge?
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Conspiracy among America's Heroes

Conspiracy among America's Heroes

by Chief Kelly Daugherty
Conspiracy among America's Heroes

Conspiracy among America's Heroes

by Chief Kelly Daugherty

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Overview

Anyone who is a manager, supervisor, leader, or involved with human-relations issues needs to read this book, and learn from these truculent life lessons and use them for future reference. Are you willing to take the ethical challenge?

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781477268667
Publisher: AuthorHouse
Publication date: 09/20/2012
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 206
File size: 429 KB

Read an Excerpt

Conspiracy among America's Heroes


By Kelly Daugherty

AuthorHouse

Copyright © 2012 Chief Kelly Daugherty, MS, EFO, CFO, MIFireE
All right reserved.

ISBN: 978-1-4772-6868-1


Chapter One

Things Mom Never Told You

"Insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting a different result." —Albert Einstein

Have you ever experienced things that you were never taught you would encounter? Remember taking your driver's license practical examination and not being told by your mother or father that the examiner would be hovering over you like a bald eagle scoping out his prey? How about when you first started school, not realizing that there were other students eyeing your lunch pail?

What about when you went on your first date—scared as ever, not knowing what to expect, when your date gives you a little peck on the lips? As time progressed, you found yourself falling in love and then, after some inexplicable event—you found yourself breaking up with the person you had come to love and appreciate!

We all know that "breaking up is hard to do" is an understatement. Breaking up can be compared to experiencing the death of someone close. It is an emotional and physical experience. You have lost someone who is very important to you. Your thoughts still dwell on them throughout the day. They were a major part of your dreams and your thoughts of the future. That is all gone now, and you feel empty. Physically you feel hungry, but food will not help.

The hardest part is that you now have to think in a completely new way, and your mind refuses to cooperate. Your thought patterns are ingrained into thinking about life in reference to your ex. You have no idea what to do next; your life ahead seems foggy, and you are a bit scared. Your thoughts, fed by your emotions, consider the situation and make you want to call your ex, explain yourself, do anything just to get back together.

However, contacting your ex is the wrong thing to do at this time in the breakup. You need a unique and well-thought-out approach to relationships and specifically getting back together with your ex. You need an overall plan and techniques that can overcome even the most challenging obstacles to making up. If you are in a relationship that has hit a rough spot, or you have already broken up and really want your ex back, then you need an overall plan, not just "tricks" to manipulate the other person into doing what you want.

These are some of life's unknown moments. Some act as precursors for future life events, like the excitement you feel when your team wins the big football game or when your firstborn child brings love into your life. These are breathtaking events that you can carry throughout your life.

In the business world, there are people who are out to make life miserable for you. These individuals have a mission: to get you to follow their guiding principles of laziness, misrepresentation, and deception, while you are struggling to convince them that their way of thinking is counterproductive to a healthy business environment.

In our lives, we experience deception, betrayal, and grievances. We feel anger, hatred, and pain. It sometimes seems that we cannot trust anybody. So many crazy people out there and a world full of lies. Just look at the amount of crime being committed. How can people act this way? Are we being victimized? Could we forgive those who trespass against us? If they do 90 percent good things but 10 percent bad things, could we just forgive them?

Individuals who seek self-satisfaction often engage in unethical, inappropriate behavior to "get back" at those who placed "undue burdens" upon them. This is often labeled as workplace revenge or organizational vengeance.

These "campaigners" engage in general action and purposeful retaliation within the workplace, in an attempt to seek what they feel is justice. The retaliator views acts of revenge in the workplace as a defensive act in response to the offender's unwarranted and unfair actions. When the offender makes the first move that is viewed by an affected colleague as unjust, the victim will often feel a need for retaliation.

Employees who engage in acts of workplace revenge are unprofessional and out-of-control individuals seeking serious vengeance against the company or a person. They also feel that they are victims of interpersonal conflicts within the organization who are compelled to seek justice by their own means—illegal or unethical as the case may be.

This revenge behavior often leads to workplace bullying. This is a tendency by individuals or groups to use persistent aggressive or unreasonable behavior against a coworker, subordinate, or employer. Workplace bullying can include such tactics as verbal, nonverbal, psychological, or physical abuse and humiliation.

This type of aggression is particularly difficult because, unlike typical forms of school bullying, workplace bullies often manipulate while operating within certain boundaries. Bullying in the workplace, whether perpetrated by management or employees, takes a wide variety of forms. Bullying can be covert or overt.

I learned that even though I have earned a number of college degrees, no classroom teaches the negative behaviors of others. You must experience them firsthand. As I travel through life, I have learned a few things:

• Life is not fair, but it is still good.

• You do not have to win every argument. Agree to disagree.

• It is okay to get angry with God. He can take it.

• Do not compare your life to others'. You have no idea what their journey is all about.

• If a relationship has to be a secret, you should not be in it.

• Everything can change in the blink of an eye. Nevertheless, do not worry; God never blinks.

• Take a deep breath. It calms the mind.

• Whatever does not kill you really does make you stronger.

• It is never too late to have a happy childhood. However, the second one is up to you and no one else.

• When it comes to going after what you love in life, do not take no for an answer.

• Burn the candles, and use the nice sheets. Do not save things for a special occasion. Today is special.

• Overprepare and then go with the flow.

• Be eccentric now. Do not wait for old age to wear purple.

• The most important organ is the brain.

• No one is in charge of your happiness except you.

• What other people think of you is none of your business.

• Time heals almost everything. Give time, time.

• However good or bad a situation is—it will change.

• Your job will not take care of you when you are sick. Your friends will. Stay in touch.

• Believe in miracles and have faith in God's timing.

• Do not audit life. Show up and make the most of it now.

• Growing old beats the alternative—dying young.

• Your children get only one childhood. Make it memorable.

• Get outside every day. Miracles are waiting everywhere.

• If we all threw our problems in a pile and saw everyone else's, we would grab ours back.

• Envy is a waste of time. You already have all you need.

• The best is yet to come.

• No matter how you feel, get up, dress up, and show up.

• Life isn't tied with a bow, but it's still a gift.

This book will take you through extraordinary experiences I encountered as a public safety professional. I did not think people would behave the way they did, but I learned that they could, they will, and they did.

Chapter Two

Emergency Services and the Community

"Life is change. Growth is optional. Choose wisely." —Karen Kaiser Clark

Firefighting is a career that can make you feel proud and accomplished, a career for which people have a lot of respect. In order to be a firefighter, you must be in shape, prepared, experienced, and ready to deal with your job emotionally, mentally, and physically. After embarking on this career path, a number of individuals soon find out that firefighting may not be the best fit for them, because of routinely subjecting themselves to the risks of fire, smoke inhalation, collapsing buildings, the lack of interpersonal relationships, failing to follow orders, and just being an unethical person.

Today's fire service has decades of research behind it, making the process less dangerous than our fathers' and grandfathers' profession. Perhaps the foremost advantage of being a firefighter is the opportunity to save the lives of others on a regular basis, a satisfaction that imbues the job with meaning. Recognized for their bravery and their contribution to others, firefighters enjoy the esteem of their communities and of society. While this is an admirable position, some firefighters find themselves in a routine and take their frustrations out on fire department management and other leadership personnel. These firefighters feel that management placed them in an uncomfortable role, thus encouraging the firefighter to do what he must to turn the tables. These individuals are never satisfied and seek to destroy other people's hard work.

Although dangerous, firefighting is also exciting. Racing to the scene of a fire, bashing down a door with an ax, charging into a burning building—these are the playtime fantasies of boys (and some girls) everywhere. Few professions will pay employees to engage in such dangerous adventures. In the course of relying on each other, firefighters typically develop a deep sense of camaraderie and teamwork.

This fraternal sense extends both to one's immediate fire company and to the profession as a whole, with firefighters everywhere sharing a mutual respect for their brothers and sisters in red. This behavior also sometimes extends to lying, cheating, not being honest, and constructing scenarios which are designed to benefit the firefighting team and not the organization as a whole.

According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, firefighting is a popular profession in part because individuals entering the field are not required to attain advanced levels of education. Many departments require individuals to hold only a high school diploma, rather than a full college degree. The results are some uneducated individuals with their own agenda, willing to take on any crusade, ethical or not.

Firefighters generally receive a good salary and excellent benefits. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, firefighters can earn upward of $100,000 per year and have excellent job security. The profession is in great demand, and approximately two-thirds of firefighters are members of unions, which help them fight against layoffs and gain extraordinary benefits—greater than others in the public and private sector. Firefighters are often given very flexible schedules. Many career firefighters work only ten days a month, giving them significant time to take on other jobs. Because fires break out intermittently, many non- unionized volunteer firefighters will remain on-call for certain periods of time while performing little actual work. This down time permits firefighters to freely and creatively develop frauds on how they can benefit as a team.

According to the Fire Service Reputation Management white paper, "the nation's fire service has long been held in justifiably high esteem. This reputation has been hard earned. The fire service is that "rock of stability" to which the public knows to turn during the upheaval of a crisis—be that crisis a dwelling fire, rescue, natural disaster, or medical emergency. Fire service members unflinchingly charge into those situations from which others flee. We render these services to a grateful nation. The public, be it those who have been aided directly by the fire service or all the others who have merely borne witness to fire service heroics on the nightly news, is thankful that we are here and ready to serve at their beck and call. However, not all is well, for that hard-earned respect is easily lost."

It does not take much for those few firefighters who disregard the public service component of the fire service mission to undermine the hard-earned respect and support garnered by all the others that the fire service has strived to attain. Disturbing headlines increasingly report sensational stories of firefighters acting not selflessly and heroically, but rather selfishly and irresponsibly. The Fire Service Reputation Management white paper is intended as a wake-up call to the fire service. The detrimental impact from fire service members who engage in unethical, immoral, inappropriate, or criminal activities reflects back not just to these individuals but also to their departments and the fire service as a whole.

I entered the fire service in the mid-1970s. At that time, President Jimmy Carter was promoting his jobs incentive plan, the Comprehensive Education and Training Act (CETA) program. This program was designed to assist in creating jobs, and it permitted strapped jurisdictions to employ individuals for a period of three years—with the final year having the jurisdiction picking up the person in gainful employment. I was one of these individuals, and this is how I started my career.

The organization that employed me had a long tradition of fire service culture, with an emphasis on developing positive behavior by all individuals. While we as young recruits had a lot to learn, we soon learned the meaning of loyalty, friendship, courtesy, and being dependable, responsible, and accountable for our actions. Over the years, I found that these traits are no longer common in the fire service—in fact, just the opposite.

In the 1980s, public-sector collective bargaining was introduced to a number of states. We in the fire service found ourselves in a difficult situation. As a team, do we file for recognition with the International Association of Firefighters union or do we act as a stand-alone bargaining unit? In our organization, we decided to stand alone as an in-house bargaining unit, mainly because we felt proud to have a job, did not have conflicts with fire management, were generally pleased with our work, and appreciated the fact that we had elected and appointed senior officials willing to work with us.

During my career, I found that individual behaviors differ and the environment helps set their tone. I was disappointed in not only the firefighters' behaviors, but also those of the elected officials who, by law, had to have a fire department but were unwilling to invest in the organization. I found a number of elected officials to have large egos, and they did whatever it took to look good in the public eye. They would actually engage in unethical behaviors, just to have their hired legal team—at the taxpayers' expense—create a loophole for them to place blame. These people are known as being made of Teflon.

In my first twenty years of service, my wife and I raised a family, contributed to our community, and developed and maintained strong family values. I completed my bachelor's and master's degree and graduated from the National Fire Academy Executive Fire Officer Program. I recognized that if I want to improve myself, higher education was the correct path. As such, I gained a number of mentors throughout the country and look up to their wisdom and maturity still today.

I began as a firefighter/emergency medical technician, rose through the ranks, and left one department to work for another as an assistant fire chief, where I was introduced to the chief fire officer's role. Promotions in the fire service are sparse. Either you had to know someone or you had to work your tail off and compete against colleagues searching for the same thing. As an assistant fire chief, my then fire chief came to me with an opportunity that would change my life.

He stated that a community just north of us was looking for an ethical, moralistic, and knowledgeable individual to lead their fire department. I took his advice and the advice of my mentors and applied for this position. After an intense selection process, I rose to the top and was selected to lead this organization.

I viewed this community as one needing fire and emergency-service leadership, since the organization was growing exponentially, and they still were utilizing part-time and on-call volunteers. The times have definitely changed, and unfortunately, the community's leadership team had no clue on how to transform it.

The Packer Township Fire Protection District is a township-run organization covering the city of Throop, Pennsylvania. In Pennsylvania, the statutory law dictates that the township is responsible for providing emergency services (fire/EMS); a city may provide the service but is not required to do so.

The City of Throop and Packer Township are similar to most combined communities throughout America—it has a suburban/urban feel for most of the city, primarily a bedroom-community feel for the township, with some business and light industry sprinkled in designated pockets. Packer is mostly a rural township, bordering the city of Throop to the east.

In 1988, the Packer Township Fire Protection District (the private "Fire Company" as it was previously named) came under Packer Township Board of Trustee control, after financial issues arose. All of the existing members became public employees on January 1, 1988 and were unhappy that they had lost control.

(Continues...)



Excerpted from Conspiracy among America's Heroes by Kelly Daugherty Copyright © 2012 by Chief Kelly Daugherty, MS, EFO, CFO, MIFireE. Excerpted by permission of AuthorHouse. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Contents

Introduction Reckless Conduct Endangers the American Fire Service....................1
Chapter 1 Things Mom Never Told You....................3
Chapter 2 Emergency Services and the Community....................7
Chapter 3 Not Everyone's Happy....................21
Chapter 4 Strategic Analysis and Proposed Master Plan....................39
Chapter 5 Vote as If Your Life Depends on It....................55
Chapter 6 Building, Growing and Anticipation....................67
Chapter 7 No Good Deed Goes Unpunished....................81
Chapter 8 Main Event....................103
Chapter 9 Just the "Tip of the Iceberg," He Says ....................109
Chapter 10 Unethical Organizational Behavior....................137
Chapter 11 A Lawyer's Advice Is His Stock in Trade....................153
Chapter 12 Decision-Making Process....................171
Chapter 13 Do the Right Thing, Every Time....................183
Chapter 14 Ethical Challenge....................192
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