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Marked safe
Marked safe















A new Fire Marshal and an entirely new team of inspectors has been hired. “Mobile Eyes” training has been ramped up, with Chief Byrne and McNees taking direct roles in fire inspection supervision. That’s why we had to clean it up.”Īs a result of the departures, Marco Fire had to completely rebuild its fire inspection team from the ground up.

marked safe

“This is something that should have never happened. “It’s a really high priority,” McNees agrees. “Business is not going to be done today as it was in the past.” “There was outreach to our condo association and the business community,” Chief Byrne says. None of them wanted to speak on-camera, but more than half claimed they had no knowledge of the falsified records.Ĭhief Byrne admits communication about the falsified records was informal but is also adamant the system has been corrected.

marked safe

WINK News spoke with more than 10 of the businesses whose inspection records were falsified. While no fires started in those 200 buildings, the risk was enormous. “Whether that was laziness or whatever other reason, I can’t answer that.” “Clearly, there were people who shirked their responsibilities,” McNees adds. “Because all three of them resigned before I had the chance to talk with them.” “There were no interviews and there was no inspection,” Chief Byrne admits.

#MARKED SAFE SOFTWARE#

Officials say it’s still unclear how much of the blame lies with confusion over the inspection software versus blatant neglect of duty. It would’ve been physically impossible for anybody to visit all of those locations in one single shift.īefore a formal investigation could be launched, a long-time fire marshal and two fire inspectors resigned from Marco Island Fire. More than 70 fire inspection reports were submitted on one calendar day. One big sign helped law enforcement realize something had to be off. “It was how it was implemented and not built out to its true potential.” “The issue was not with the software itself,” Chief Byrne explains. Instead, three employees submitted inspections that never happened. “Clearly, they weren’t doing things properly according to their own rules,” McNees says.įire Chief Chris Byrne says the “Mobile Eyes” software was supposed to make coordinating and logging fire inspection reports easier. The accusations sparked a close examination from city staff of the inspection system. All had been marked as inspected and safe but hadn’t been checked at all. The list includes massive residential buildings holding hundreds of homes along with various businesses across the island. 200 building reports that had been falsely submitted into the Marco Island Fire Department’s “Mobile-Eyes” inspection software. “We came to find out that there were a certain number of inspections over time that were entered as completed but had never been done,” McNees explains. “It’s getting a lot more attention and it needed it.”ĭocuments from the Florida Department of Law Enforcement show claims of falsified fire inspection reports led to a special investigation into the Marco Fire inspection records system starting in April 2022.Īfter looking closely, leadership realized just how large the problem was. “It’s one of our most fundamental roles is to help provide for the public safety. Marco Island City Manager Mike McNees admits the severity of the problem. No building and no community is exempt from the horrors of a structure fire, even on luxurious, picturesque Marco Island.įor a stretch of time, hundreds of condos and apartments and thousands of people were vulnerable to fires that their building’s safety devices might not have been equipped to handle. Now, after a lengthy law enforcement investigation, a WINK News exclusive investigation can explain why.

marked safe

Three Marco Island Fire Department employees abruptly left the department last year. Hundreds of buildings, including homes and businesses, were left potentially exposed to a deadly threat.















Marked safe