Mayor Eric Garcetti (File photo)

Mayor Eric Garcetti nominated Deputy Chief Kristin Crowley to be the first woman to lead the Los Angeles Fire Department following Chief Ralph Terrazas’ retirement on March 26.

The mayor announced the appointment alongside City Council President
Nury Martinez, Crowley and Terrazas outside the Frank Hotchkin Memorial
Training Center. The Los Angeles City Council will have to confirm the
appointment. Crowley already made history within the LAFD when she became the city’s first female fire marshal in 2016.

“I am honored and humbled by the opportunity to be the next fire
chief of the Los Angeles City Fire Department and to lead the department into
the future,” Crowley said. “As the fire chief, if confirmed, I vow to take a
strategic and balanced approach to ensure we meet the needs of the community we serve. We will focus our efforts on increasing our operational effectiveness, enhancing firefighter safety and well-being, and fully commit to fostering a diverse, equitable, and inclusive culture within the LAFD.”

Crowley took the firefighters’ exam in 1998 and placed among the top
50 scores out of 16,000 applicants, according to the department. During her 22 years at the department, she rose through the ranks as firefighter, firefighter paramedic, engineer, fire inspector, captain I, captain II, battalion chief, assistant chief, fire marshal and deputy chief.

“Throughout her distinguished career, Kristin Crowley has proven her
brilliance, determination and bravery on the job again and again. She’s also
shown this city her heart, with her tireless commitment to helping students
access life-changing educational opportunities. There is no one better equipped to lead the LAFD at this moment than Kristin. She’s ready to make history, and I’m proud to nominate her as the department’s next chief,” Garcetti said.

As deputy chief, Crowley helped develop a five-year strategic plan
aimed at fostering a culture within the department that is more open to change, according to the mayor’s office. She will build on this effort, if confirmed as chief, to deepen existing efforts and create new ways to foster equity and inclusion within the department, the mayor’s office added.

“If confirmed as your new fire chief, I will be fully committed to leading and inspiring our tremendous department into an exciting future that is filled with new opportunities to grow, to innovate and to empower,” Crowley said.

Martinez said Crowley is known “as someone who works hard and goes
above and beyond what she’s expected to do. She looks at a challenge and says “I’m going to do that. I’m going to do that and more. Just watch me.”’

Terrazas, who became the department’s first Latino chief when
appointed in 2014, previously announced his intention to retire this year. “It was a privilege to serve as the fire chief of this world-class department,” he said Tuesday. “For nearly eight years, we made considerable strides in technology, implemented innovative ways to respond to emergencies,
and became a model for other agencies.” Terrazas added that Crowley “is an exemplary leader and has a broad base of experience that will serve the department well … “Chief Crowley has been successful at every position, and I expect her success to continue as the next fire chief.”

If confirmed, Crowley would lead an agency that has recently come
under fire for allegations of a culture of racism, sexism, retaliation and
abuse endured by women at the department. On Oct. 19, Fire Commissioner Rebecca Ninburg called on the mayor to remove Terrazas as chief, saying, “culture starts at the top and leaders set the tone.”

The day before Ninburg sent the letter to Garcetti, the Los Angeles Women in the Fire Service, an association of female firefighters, had a news conference to call for the chief’s removal. The association’s president Kris Larson said Terrazas had brushed off the incidents as “one-offs or pockets.” Garcetti issued a statement to City News Service after the news conference saying he had “full confidence” in Terrazas and that he “has done an excellent job of leading and rebuilding our fire department during some of our toughest days ever.”

Terrazas said in a statement to City News Service in October that he
met with the Los Angeles Women in the Fire Service and discussed collaborative initiatives to improve the work environment.