A local firefighter’s coronavirus-related death prompted one New Jersey mayor to fight for new legislation

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On his days off, the firefighter and dad of two served as an EMT and as a member of the volunteer community emergency response team, said Hector Lora, the mayor of Passaic.

Last year, at the fire department’s Christmas Toy Drive, Tolentino, Jr. volunteered to be Santa Claus, said his wife, Maria Vazquez. He sported a traditional red suit and white beard while cruising down the neighborhood streets on a motorcycle to hand out toys.

“This virus has left us with a void that can’t be filled,” Vazquez told CNN. “Family was everything to him (Tolentino Jr.).”

The back-to-back tragedies have left Vazquez and her family — including her children, 9-year-old Ailani, and 7-year-old Israel — devastated. With the grief, Vazquez said, also came the sudden realization of having to raise their kids on her own, without the income of her spouse to help them.

The family will receive an initial pension payout based on Tolentino Jr.’s salary at the time of death, Lora said. But Vazquez fears that will not be enough.

Lora, who said he was “impacted” by Tolentino Jr.’s big heart, decided to champion efforts to help Vazquez and others like her.

The mayor’s office is asking state lawmakers to recognize coronavirus-related deaths of first responders as line-of-duty deaths. Doing so, he said, would help secure additional financial and health benefits for the families of those who have died from the virus.

“It’s unfair for the family of any first responder to have to put their life on the line and then doubt whether or not their children will have their education paid for or whether or not the family will have resources that are necessary,” Lora said.

‘Do the right thing now’

In New Jersey, Lora is advocating for the introduction of a bill similar to the 9/11 Victim Compensation Fund, which provides additional health and financial assistance to emergency workers that rushed to the scene of the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001.

The fund paid out $7 billion in damages when it originally operated from 2001 to 2003, was reopened in 2011 and extended for another five years in 2015. Former late night host Jon Stewart, a 9/11 first responders advocate, was among those pushing for it to be reauthorized. President Donald Trump signed a bill reauthorizing the fund last year.

“We don’t have to reinvent the wheel,” Lora said. “With the 9/11 bill, we have already set a precedent. So I am calling on our government leaders, from the president on down, to cut the bureaucracy and do the right thing now, not 10 years from now.”

The mayor’s office has been working alongside Passaic Fire Department Chief Patrick Trentacost, and the local firefighter’s union, to reach out to New Jersey state legislators. They want local state officials to introduce a bill that would recognize the deaths as line of duty.

“The challenge that we are facing is that under the current Department of Justice guidelines which oversees the Public Safety Officers’ Benefit program, in order for these deaths to be classified as in the line of duty, you need to have evidence that the virus was more likely contracted while on duty and not off, which is ridiculous,” Lora said.

This week, Lora said he is sending a letter to New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy, Sens. Cory Booker and Bob Menendez, as well as Rep. Bill Pascrell, who represents the state’s ninth district.

New Jersey lost another first responder, 24-year-old EMT Kevin Leiva, to the virus on April 7, Lora said. He anticipates the number of coronavirus-related deaths among first responders will grow as the pandemic continues to spread.

“Let’s be reasonable here: When it comes to our men and women in uniform, our firefighters, our EMTs, our police officers, I think it’s a given that they exposed themselves at all times,” Lora said.

There are more than 61,000 confirmed coronavirus cases in New Jersey, according to data from John Hopkins University. As of Monday morning, at least 2,350 people in the state have died from the virus.

Some New York first responders want similar legislation

In neighboring New York, which is considered the US epicenter of the pandemic, some first responders agree that legislation to help first responders, many who are at the frontlines of the pandemic, is important.

Lt. Vinny Variale, president of New York’s Uniformed EMS Officers Union, is among those who backs Lora’s efforts to enact legislation not just in New Jersey, but also in New York.

Covid-19's devastating toll on the NYPD

“The whole thing has a very 9/11 feel to it where government agencies were telling us ‘don’t worry, the air is fine, come in and do the work’,” Variale told CNN. “And we went in because that’s our job, that’s what we do — and once again (with coronavirus crisis), we put our lives in jeopardy.”

The union represents 535 EMS officers, along with 3,900 EMTs and Paramedics, Variale said.

Contracting the virus is a constant worry for the firefighters and paramedics, who in New York are now dealing with a record number of 911 calls due to the coronavirus outbreak. In early April, the Federal Emergency Management Agency sent hundreds of ambulances, EMTs and paramedics to New York City to help assist FDNY.

“When we enter a home, we really don’t know if we are going to get infected,” Jose Gonzalez, a paramedic in New York City, told CNN. “But we have to keep doing our jobs. We must treat the person, take them to the hospital and the fear is not only that we will get it but that we could be binging it home to our families. We have colleagues who are staying at the fire station or sleeping in their cars because of that fear.”

Police and fire departments warn supplies running low

As of Sunday, 724 members of the FDNY have tested positive for Covid-19, FDNY spokesman Jim Long told CNN. The number includes firefighters, EMS and civilian personnel. There are still approximately 2,700 members of the FDNY who are out on some type of medical leave pp including but not limited to Covid-19 cases, he said.

Variale said the union is working with state officials to create legislation, not unlike that Lora is working to push in New Jersey.

“We are in the initial stages of working on something in the New York State legislature that would acknowledge that any member, any first responder, that gets Covid-19 was infected while they were working and doing their duties,” Variale said. “You just have to assume that we have a higher exposure to it than the average citizen would have.”

Variale said he is optimistic that a bill similar to the 9/11 Victim Compensation Fund would gain enough support to be passed quickly.

CNN has reached out to New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s office, and Sens. Kirsten Gillibrand and Chuck Schumer’s offices for comment

Attention at the federal level

Lora’s cause has already been on the minds of some members of Congress.

Kristin Lynch, a spokeswoman for Booker, said the New Jersey Democrat is working with Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-IA) to help with this very issue.

Israel Tolentino Jr.'s firefighter uniform.

“Our firefighters, EMTs, and police officers have enough to worry about as they work day and night to protect us from the threat of Covid-19, and shouldn’t have to question whether our country will be there for their families if the unthinkable happens,” Lynch told CNN in an email statement. “Senator Booker has been working with Senator Grassley, who has long championed death benefits for law enforcement, to seek a solution to this problem.”

A spokesperson for Grassley’s office did not immediately respond to CNN’s request for comment.

As Lora and others continue to work on enacting potential legislation, Vazquez said she is focusing on the memories she has of her late husband.

“The kids and I will always remember the moments we lived together, the love he gave us every day” she said of Tolentino Jr. “And how lucky we were to have him.”



Source : CNN