Aurora’s firehouse drama is getting a fresh leading voice. On Monday, Mayor John Laesch nominated former Roselle Fire Chief Mark Bozik to lead the Aurora Fire Department, sending the choice to the City Council for a confirmation vote at Tuesday’s meeting. Bozik would take over a department that has weathered recent leadership turnover and a bitter staffing dispute, just as the city advances a major public‑safety campus and several fire station relocation projects.
Laesch said he was “most impressed” with Bozik’s experience, perspective and leadership, and announced the pick publicly, as reported by Chicago Tribune. The mayor cast the hire as a stabilizing move, arguing that Bozik’s lengthy record in operations and interagency coordination would help guide Aurora through staffing and infrastructure changes that are already stirring debate.
Bozik’s resume and regional ties
Bozik retired from the Roselle Fire Department in early 2025 after more than 30 years in the fire service, where officials praised his pandemic‑era leadership and work on succession planning, according to Roselle and local reporting by the Daily Herald. He is listed on regional emergency‑communications and safety committees and has collaborated with DuPage‑area partners on school‑safety efforts and mutual‑aid planning, per Du‑Comm meeting records.
Union pushback and split endorsements
The timing of the pick drops Bozik into the middle of a budget brawl. The International Association of Fire Fighters Local 99 has publicly opposed parts of Laesch’s proposed 2026 budget, arguing that plans to eliminate several firefighter positions could leave fire apparatus unstaffed and put residents at risk, as reported by Patch. At the same time, Roselle’s own IAFF Local 4051 has thrown its support behind Bozik’s bid for the Aurora job in a letter of backing, a detail noted by Chicago Tribune.
Next steps for the department
The nomination now hinges on the Aurora City Council, which is scheduled to vote on the appointment Tuesday, according to the city calendar. City records show Deputy Chief Kevin Nickel has been serving as interim chief since David McCabe departed late last year, and Nickel presented the department’s budget to the council in December, per city meeting minutes. Whoever ends up with the chief’s badge will be walking into a department at the heart of a planned public‑safety campus and multiple station relocations that city staff have been developing to cut response times and modernize aging facilities, as detailed in local reporting and planning documents…