Date: Fri 12-Jun-1998
Date: Fri 12-Jun-1998
Publication: Bee
Author: CURT
Quick Words:
edink-firehouse-office-space
Full Text:
ED INK: The Town's Ailing Facilities
One of the harsher truths of public life is that even the most meticulous
long-range planning can be tripped up by a tangle of snags and snafus lurking
around every corner. In the past week, just as the town was finally getting
down to seriously addressing its growing need for safe, habitable office
space, local building officials declared the Newtown Hook and Ladder Firehouse
unfit to house fire trucks.
The fire trucks were rolled out of their shelter and into the elements last
Friday night, where they have been guarded round-the-clock against vandalism
ever since. The floors supporting the trucks have developed structural flaws
over the years that only turned up last week during a routine inspection
associated with the building's leaking roof.
The volunteer Newtown Hook & Ladder Company has shouldered most of its own
capital costs over the years through fund-raising campaigns. In fact, it
recently purchased a small pumper truck without any contribution from the
town's coffers. Hook & Ladder's current dilemma at the firehouse, located
directly behind Edmond Town Hall, may ultimately require a rather expensive
solution -- a new firehouse. Hook & Ladder's volunteer service to Newtown is
so essential that its need for a safe and adequate facility is not just a
company problem -- it's a town problem.
The structural problems at the firehouse bring new urgency to the town's study
of its own need for office space. One of the more promising alternatives for
the town is the conversion of the Hook & Ladder firehouse into office space.
The building's proximity to the existing offices on Main Street and its
potential for expansion make it a good candidate. Neither the town nor the
fire company, however, should spend significant sums of money on permanently
reinforcing floors to support fire trucks if all they really need to support
are filing cabinets.
What the town most needs to buy at this point is time. If temporary supports
will allow the fire trucks to be rolled back into the firehouse, fine. Perhaps
temporary shelter for the trucks could also be arranged in the former
Fairfield Hills firehouse. But eventual disposition of the Hook & Ladder
firehouse along with that of Town Hall South will have to be considered
together along with other alternatives for new or renovated facilities around
town.
Just this week, the Board of Selectmen selected an architectural firm to spend
the next few months studying the town's "space needs." Once the architects
file their report, both the selectmen and the Legislative Council need to show
resolve and provide the leadership to follow through with some action.
The need is clear, yet the solutions, particularly if they are expensive, will
be a hard sell, especially now that the Board of Education is advocating the
construction of a new school on town land at Fairfield Hills at a cost of $22
million. Additional capital expenses at this time will put pressure on the tax
rate and risk upsetting taxpayers. But to let the town's infrastructure
degrade to extent that it has at Town Hall South, where further renovations
now seem like a waste of money, is irresponsible and even more costly in the
long run.