A Former KVEC Volunteer Speaks Out

July 31, 2025 | By: AnonymousVerified

While I was a member of KVEC, Dan became chief. We had originally held a vote, and he didn’t win — but he didn’t accept that. Instead, he went to Gabe Rose, the Keokuk Fire Chief, and secured the position outside the vote. Later, when major internal issues began to surface under Dan’s leadership, he told us to lie to the public — to say everything was fine when it wasn’t. That didn’t sit right with me. I stayed as long as I could, hoping to help fix things. But eventually, Dan started accusing me of lying about working my job — when I actually was working. Like every volunteer, my full-time job comes first. On my last day, he told me I had to choose: KVEC or my real job. That’s not how volunteers are supposed to be treated.

Let me be perfectly clear: I joined KVEC to serve this community, to be a part of something meaningful, and to make a difference. But under Dan Tillman’s command, things began to deteriorate rapidly. Morale plummeted, policies became unpredictable, and trust among the team was eroded. Volunteers were treated like disposable labor — unless they were part of Dan’s inner circle.

When concerns were raised internally, we were brushed off. When I asked questions, I was met with hostility. When I tried to help make things better, I was pushed to the sidelines. But what disturbed me most was being instructed to deceive the public. That’s not leadership. That’s not integrity. And that’s certainly not the kind of transparency any emergency response organization should be built on.

Dan’s need to control everything extended beyond operations — it reached into people’s livelihoods and personal lives. I was expected to prioritize KVEC over my actual career, despite being a volunteer. When I refused to give up my job — the job that pays my bills and lets me earn a living— I was shown the door. That kind of ultimatum doesn’t belong in any professional setting, let alone one built on volunteer service.

I didn’t want to leave. I believed in the mission. But it became painfully obvious that under Dan’s leadership, the mission had changed. It was no longer about community or service — it was about ego, power, and control.

To those still involved, or who are thinking about volunteering: I hope you speak up. I hope you never have to experience the pressure, manipulation, and disrespect that many of us faced. And to the community: you deserve better. You deserve to know the truth about what’s happening behind the doors of the organization meant to protect you.

I’m sharing this because silence only helps the ones who are doing wrong. We can’t fix what’s broken if we pretend it isn’t. KVEC can be great again — but not without accountability, not without new leadership, and not without truth.