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Walking the Line

By Jorge Casuso

June 9 -- It’s late Wednesday morning and Fire Marshal Jim Glew is looking for the blurred black line barely visible along Arizona Avenue. If you didn’t know it was there, you’d likely never see it, but it’s a demarcation as stark as any physical boundary.

Between the line and the curb is a long row of tented tables that line the street, on the other a flock of Farmers Market shoppers checking produce, forking over cash, tasting sample fruit.
Glew likes to point out the line, matched by another one running parallel just 12 feet away.

The space between the two is wide enough to allow pedestrians to stroll comfortably in each direction, wide enough for emergency vehicles to get through.

“We can attain public safety without being intrusive,” Glew says with a New York accent he’s retained after 19 years on the coast. “That’s the blend we want to achieve.”

That’s Glew’s mantra, the philosophy of the man who makes sure, among other duties, that Santa Monica is safe from potential hazards. As Fire Marshal, Glew and his team of eight inspectors are in charge of everything from “daycares to high rises,” from emptying overcrowded bars to assuring film shoots follow the City’s safety script.

Before he walks the Farmers Market, Glew confers with a Bayside official. It seems a film crew set to shoot the following day has been trying to skirt the regulations and possibly film at a local business without a permit.

For Glew, it’s a clear-cut case. “If they don’t comply with the City requirement, they will be shut down by police,” he says.

But not all decisions are so black and white. Shortly after noon, as the Farmers Market is winding down, Glew’s team receives reports that three Downtown bars are “grossly overcrowded.”

The reports are true. Soccer fans have squeezed into the bars, filling them far beyond the legal capacity. It’s Glew’s call.

Instead of emptying the bars, Glew chooses to post the inspectors on standby and monitor the situation for another half hour while the game plays out. Afterwards, they fine the establishments $750 each for the violations. The decision, Glew explains, is based on his bottom line – public safety.

“If we tried to clear out the bars, we’d have fights and create a hazardous public safety situation,” Glew says. “They’d been partying for two hours. I told my staff, ‘Leave them where they are, otherwise you’ll have a Donnybrook.”

While Glew’s team must insure all of Santa Monica is safe from potential safety hazards, the Third Street Promenade, along with the Pier, is a big part of his beat.

“Our biggest fear is having a situation on the Promenade where there are large crowds during a fire,” says Glew, who has been with the department ten years, the last four as Fire Marshal.

Although some of the old buildings still don’t have sprinklers, the strip is well maintained and has no blighted storefronts that pose a danger. Street performers are also not allowed to throw flames or juggle chainsaws.

But there are smaller, less visible hazards lurking in everyday corners. Take your typical five-pound propane tank, the one used for backyard barbecues and cooking at special outdoor events on the Promenade.

“A five-pound propane tank will level a three-story building if it’s in the basement and leaks and finds an ignition source,” Glew says. “They have to be ten feet from the cooking area.”

That’s why when they’re not in use Glew makes sure the tanks are safely chained outdoors behind the buildings. But in keeping with his philosophy, Glew isn’t heavy handed with inspections.

“We’re our brother’s keeper, but we want them to be responsible,” Glew says. “We don’t like to cite. We like to educate, engineer, then enforce.”

Glew caught the fire-fighting bug when he was a kid growing up on Long Island, rooting for the Mets and hanging out Sundays at the firehouse, where his father was a volunteer firefighter for 40 years.

“I kind of got the bug,” says Glew, who’s been a professional firefighter since 1980. “Fire fighting is a camaraderie of career people. It’s not a nine to five. It’s a great brotherhood of men and women who have safety in mind all the time.”

 

“We can attain public safety without being intrusive.” Jim Glew

 

 

“A five-pound propane tank will level a three-story building."

 

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