12 Houston Fire Academy Cadets Share Racist Memes, Messed Around and Found Out at the Worst Time

The firefighting hopefuls were even warned to stop their racist behavior... and still chose not to.

Houston City Council Member Julian Ramirez called the behavior of 12 Houston Fire Training Academy cadets โ€œregrettable and very disappointingโ€ after they circulated racist content in a private Instagram group chat. They were even bold enough to continue their racist behavior online even after receiving warnings to stop...and for that they paid the ultimate price.

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Once officials confirmed the group resumed sharing โ€œrudeโ€ and โ€œcrassโ€ things anyway, they decided enough was enough. Just six days before their scheduled graduation after an eight-month training program, the cadets were terminated following an internal investigation.

HFD sources did not specify the chatโ€™s contents, but they said it contained โ€œinappropriate memes and images.โ€ In a written statement, Chief Thomas Munoz addressed the situation, saying how, โ€œRacism and hateful behavior have no home in Mayor Whitmireโ€™s administration or the Houston Fire Department.โ€

During the first week of the academy, cadets are ordered to undergo anti-discrimination and anti-harassment training. According to reports, the department was tipped off about the racist social media group by a fellow cadet in the most recent graduating class. Afterwards, the cadets were required to complete yet another round of anti-discrimination training.

The financial impact of the decision is also significant. The city spends approximately $100K โ€” each โ€” to train individual cadets, KHOU 11 reports. โ€œThe city has invested so much money in these cadets and then they made mistakes, were warned about it and continued on their course of action and had to be fired,โ€ Ramirez said, per ABC 13. โ€œ$1.2 million could pay for a lot of things we need,โ€ he added when asked about the cityโ€™s tight budget.

Ramirez wants the city to explore possible legal avenues to reclaim training costs when cases of misconduct arise. โ€œThere should be a mechanism for the city to recoup its investment when the cadet messes up in that fashion,โ€ Ramirez said.

HFD said, per KHOU 11, only 27 cadets made it to the graduation swearing-in on April 24.

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