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National Park Service Fires Police Chief
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Saturday, July 10, 2004
WASHINGTON -- The chief of the U.S. Park Police was fired Friday, seven months after she was suspended for publicly complaining her department was understaffed and underfunded.

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  The Interior Department said Teresa Chambers was dismissed after a review of her case by deputy assistant secretary Paul Hoffman.

The group representing Chambers in her legal struggle, Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility, confirmed that she was fired for breaking government rules against making public comments about the budget and lobbying.

In a statement released by PEER, Chambers vowed to continue her fight for her job.

"While I am certainly disappointed in the actions taken today by the Department of the Interior, the public support that I have enjoyed from across the country has been overwhelming," Chambers said. "It makes me all the more determined to stay the course, to fight the good fight."

Chambers' firing came hours after she filed a petition for reinstatement to her job before the Merit Systems Protection Board, a a quasi-judicial agency that makes sure federal workers are protected against abuses by agency management. The board is hearing Chambers' appeal of her suspension. Her attorneys will retain the right to question Interior Department officials under oath and subpoena internal documents, PEER spokesman Chas Offutt said.

Interior Department spokeswoman Tina Kreisher would not comment on the reasons for Chambers' dismissal, but said the chief was off base with complaints that her department did not receive enough money.

"There's been a lot of talk from Chief Chambers about the Park Police budget. I'd like to report that the Park Police operating budget has increased by 39 percent since the Bush administration took office," said Kreisher.

Chambers was suspended and placed under a gag order on Dec. 5, a few days after telling various news media that she had been forced to cut back on patrols because her officers were required to guard national monuments. Chambers said her department had a $12 million budget shortfall at the time and needed $8 million for the upcoming fiscal year.

Two weeks later, the National Park Service moved to fire her.

The U.S. Park Police patrol the National Mall, parks in Washington, the Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island in New York Harbor, San Francisco's Golden Gate Bridge and Presidio, and some scenic parkways in Maryland and Virginia. The force employs nearly 680 people, but vacancies have left it 15 percent below its authorized strength.

Chambers was in charge of negotiations with "Tractor Man" Dwight Watson, the North Carolina tobacco farmer who parked his tractor on the Mall in March 2003 and claimed to have bombs. The ensuing 47-hour standoff disrupted four consecutive rush hours. Watson surrendered peacefully and no explosives were found.

Chambers became the first woman to lead the U.S. Park Police in February 2002, after serving as police chief in Durham, N.C. Before that, she spent 21 years as a police officer in Prince George's County, Md.

There have been two interim chiefs in Chambers' absence: Ben Holmes, who retired in February, and Dwight Pettiford.

© 2004 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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