It appears that the Middletown firefighters were not willing to renegotiate their salary/benefits to save any of the below fire positions. If I am wrong about this, please someone, tel me.
Can someone also explain to me how Kettering which is smaller than Middletown, i believe. But does have a larger population by about 5000-6000(if memory is correct) has about 52 full-time firefighters and 102 volunteer firefighters and we are going to get by with only 70+? It just does not make any sense.
Since the firefighters do not appear to be interested in saving postions. I will vote no on the upcoming public safety levy in Novemeber 2012
Pacman MIDDLETOWN — In roughly one week, the changes to the
Middletown Division of Fire as outlined in the 2012 budget will go into
effect.
But — for at least the first quarter — the fire
department will operate as it is now.
In mid-November staffing levels were reduced to
compensate for inflated overtime costs. An ambulance and a two-person crew was
moved from Station 81 on Clinton Street to Station 84 on Tytus Avenue. That
station’s three-person crew and a fire apparatus were taken out of service.
Minimum staffing levels were reduced from 19 to 16 in the process.
The city of Middletown’s 2012 budget included $3.7
million in cuts and the reduction of nine firefighter positions — establishing a
permanent minimum staffing level of 16.
Originally, six firefighters were to be laid off.
Recently, however, an added retirement has saved one job. Five will now be laid
off, effective Jan. 1.
Entering 2012, the fire department is in wait-and-see
mode. Operationally, what unfolds in the second, third and fourth quarters of
the year, according to fire Chief Steve Botts, is still to be decided.
“We didn’t lay anyone off (in 2011) — we were saving
on overtime in the last quarter,” Botts said. “But when the positions are
reduced in January, (then) going forward we’ll be saving salaries and wages for
those positions as well as all the costs tied to them ... and that includes
overtime. That’s what we need to be inside our budget in ’12.”
The department is now looking at making changes to
response districts, shifting them in accordance with where personnel has been
moved.
So while the medic crew moved from Station 81 to 84
is now able to respond quicker to emergency calls in the northeastern part of
town, the bulk of its calls are still in the Clinton Street area, Botts
said.
“What we can do is change the response districts — we
can take the area furthest south and add that to (the area) covered by the
headquarters’ medic crew,” he said of the fire house at 2300 Roosevelt Blvd.
“When you do that, you want to give Medic 81 some northern territory. Again, our
objective is to keep them balanced.”
Initially, Botts recommended closing Station 84 as
part of 2012 budget cuts, saying research has suggested departments that
fluctuate their use of fire stations confuse their communities as to whether
neighborhood stations are open or not. Additionally, Station 84 is one of the
older buildings used by the department — making capital expenses higher.
Further, an analysis conducted by an outside agency concluded that of the fire
stations, Station 84 — while in an ideal location 50 years ago — is now not
serving as great of a need on Tytus Avenue.
The station’s closure is not off the table.
The fact only underlines the department’s ongoing
challenges, Botts said.
“I just see us in a historic situation as a
department providing service to a community,” he said. “People will look back 50
years from now and say, ‘How did they do it?’
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