MEXICO — Rumford and Mexico selectmen took a baby step toward regionalization Thursday night, unanimously agreeing by straw poll to share in the purchase of a 2008 dual-purpose ladder truck.
That followed a bigger eventual step toward combining fire departments in both towns by housing the ladder truck in Rumford, which is in the process of downsizing its fleet for increased efficiency.
Neither town has a reliable ladder truck, which prompted the joint meeting. Rumford’s 22-year-old truck has been out of service for a while, because it needs $65,000 in repairs; Mexico has an aging 1978 ladder that recently returned to service following repairs.
Rather than dump more money into both trucks that may last a year or two, Rumford Chief Bob Chase and Mexico Chief Gary Wentzell told both boards it makes better fiscal sense to buy a 4-year-old truck with a 20-year life expectancy.
Chase led off, saying that he and Wentzell agree in concept that the greater Rumford/Mexico area could be adequately served by a single reliable apparatus located in Rumford, with the costs shared by all benefiting communities.
He said Andover’s ladder truck isn’t certified currently and needs repairs, while Mexico’s ladder is certified but likely to not be serviceable within the next few years.
That leaves Dixfield’s recently repaired ladder truck to serve all three towns, but the fire station isn’t manned, which increases response times.
“This sinks or swims based on Rumford and Mexico working together,” Chase said of the proposal to share in the purchase based on a formula to be worked out.
One 80-20 percent proposal is for Rumford, which has the greater need, to pay the larger share of $440,000 for a $550,000 truck. Mexico would pay $110,000.
Both towns have money in reserve accounts to draw from, reducing the amount to be raised by taxation, officials said.
When talk shifted to repairing the aging ladders, Wentzell shared Mexico’s experience of dumping several thousand dollars into their ladder to the point where it’s now threatening his reserve account.
“I would not recommend taking a 34-year-old truck and putting $100,000 into it and think you’re going to get 15 years out of it,” Wentzell said.
Chase added more perspective.
“I have an engine due in 2013 for replacement and another one due in 2014, and then the ladder, had it survived, was due four to five years thereafter, so we were looking at a million dollars in trucks potential for purchase in the next five to seven years,” Chase said.
He said he could combine engine and ladder trucks in one called a quint, a dual-purpose truck.
Wentzell said that if both towns shared in the purchase of such a truck, they could get rid of two or more trucks.
“Instead of having to replace two engines or pumpers, he may only have to replace one, so if you factor that into what it’s going to cost us to replace our ladder and what it’s going to cost Bob for that truck, it’s really kind of a no-brainer,” Wentzell said.
“And still, the towns would have what’s needed.”
Selectmen agreed.
“I think it’s a win-win situation,” Mexico Selectman Reggie Arsenault said. “To me, it would be foolish to put more money into two trucks.”
“We live in a town that has many multistory buildings close to each other and it’s a disaster waiting to happen,” Rumford Selectman Jolene Lovejoy said.
“We’ve got to do what we’ve got to do for the safety of our residents. Sometimes something trumps taxes, and the safety of our constituents trumps taxes.”
“I’m not a firefighter and I don’t play one on TV, so I rely on our experts to inform us on the best way to go,” Rumford Selectman Jeff Sterling said of Chase and Wentzell.
“I really have believed when we talk about budgets, the last thing a person on a third-floor deck is thinking when the fire’s below and burning their building down, is not that they’re paying too much in taxes, but that, ‘I want that firetruck there now and get me out of here.’”
- Rumford and Mexico selectmen and town managers listen to Mexico fire Chief Gary Wentzell, left, talk Thursday night in Mexico about buying a 2008 ladder truck. From left are Rumford fire Chief Bob Chase, Rumford Town Manager Carlo Puiia and Rumford Selectman Jeremy Volkernick (both mostly hidden), Mexico Selectmen Reggie Arsenault, George Byam and Byron Ouellette, Rumford Selectman Jolene Lovejoy, Mexico Town Manager John Madigan, Rumford Selectmen Greg Buccina, Jeff Sterling, Brad Adley and Mexico Selectmen Peter Merrill (mostly hidden) and Richie Philbrick.
- Rumford fire Chief Bob Chase explains how a dual-purpose engine and ladder truck called a quint could better serve Rumford and Mexico needs if it had a pre-plumbed aerial waterway on at least a 100-foot-long aerial stick to shoot water down on three-story buildings. He spoke during a joint meeting of selectmen Thursday night in Mexico.
- Rumford fire Chief Bob Chase, right, listened during joint talks between Rumford and Mexico selectmen Thursday night in Mexico on an aging ladder truck problem. Mexico fire Chief Gary Wentzell, left, explained why it would be beneficial to both towns to buy a 2008 dual purpose ladder truck and house it in Rumford.
- Mexico Selectmen Reggie Arsenault, left, and Byron Ouellette, right, listen to fellow Selectman George Byam, center, explain why he thinks Mexico and Rumford should buy one dual-purpose ladder and engine truck. The meeting was held Thursday night in Mexico.
- Rumford Selectman Jolene Lovejoy, back, left, and Mexico Town Manager John Madigan, listen to Rumford Board of Selectmen Chairman Greg Buccina talk about the towns’ problems of aging firetrucks. The meeting was held Thursday night in Mexico.
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