Officials Making Room For Ambulance Garage At FFH
Officials Making Room For Ambulance Garage At FFH
By Kendra Bobowick
âI think we can have the framework of a lease in place in the next 60 days â no reason we canât,â said Fairfield Hills Authority Chairman John Reed regarding the Newtown Ambulance Associationâs interest to lease land and build a new facility on the former state hospital campus.
Both the town attorney David Grogins and the associationâs private council Fran Pennarola have become involved with the lease discussions that have progressed since late last year. Among concerns noted as recently as Tuesday this week, Mr Reed said, âThere are certain issues related to their financing and building approvals that need to be addressed before executing a lease.â
He wants to be sure that âregardless of good faithâ efforts by both parties, nothing goes wrong that could âbog down the projectâ for several years. Despite the ânormalâ lease concerns, he said the ambulance association is âpart of the familyâ in the Newtown community. âThey are an essential member because of the value and importance of their service, and the quality with which they provide it.â
On Tuesday afternoon lease subcommittee members Jim Bernardi and Mr Reed discussed a communication from Mr Grogins âpertaining to the possible content for a lease between the Town of Newtown and the Newtown Volunteer Ambulance Association,â state the closed sessionâs minutes. As he relayed to the full authority Wednesday, the minutes indicate that they talked about items including common area charges, possible insurance requirements, utility charges, damage or destruction issues, default, sewer and water charges, and hazardous waste.
To the authority the following evening, he said, âI told [ambulance association President Bruce Herring] that weâre close.â
He also noted, âI think they have the right answers for most of what we questioned.â Among concerns were insurance coverage for anyone inhabiting the building, including the ambulance volunteers and contracted entities. âWe wanted to be sure they all are under insurance,â said Mr Reed. âLawyers want to be ready for worst casesâ¦â
Mr Herring had also expressed to Mr Reed a desire to get into buildings 50, 51, and 52, which are visible from Mile Hill South after turning off Wasserman Way. Those buildings stand on the site on that corner across from Reed Intermediate Schoolâs playing fields where the ambulance garage would sit on roughly three acres. The parcel sits between Wasserman Way and Keating Farm Road that runs through the center of the campus. Experts need to assess remediation cost estimates for demolition of those homes, for one, Mr Reed explained. All costs are carried by the ambulance association.
In, January Mr Herring started the year by saying to the authority members, âShow me the lease!â He had said, âWe sent [the authority] a letter requesting a lease ⦠show me the lease,â he repeated, eager to acquire a new home to expand the associationâs cramped Main Street location.
With preliminary architectural drawings in hand, Mr Herring opened the black and white renderings for authority members to see after handing out a smaller 8-by-11-inch sketch for them to keep.
The proposed one-story, 12,500-square-foot building would face Mile Hill South Road, with its back to Norwalk Hall. Authority member John Madzula is the planâs architect.
Mr Reed had a preliminary draft motion prepared, approving a parcel designation of no more than three acres.
âThere are things I think need to be on the table,â said Mr Reed. âI donât see a problem designating an area with conditionsâ¦â He would later observe, âI think everyone was supportive of the ambulance proposal from the get-go. Itâs central, and when dealing with life and death situations, itâs important where it is placed.
He said this week, â[The authority] is 100 percent for them coming here.â
As listed in Mr Reedâs draft motion in January, he was seeking appropriate site plan approvals from town agencies, a timeline so that the town does not have a parcel set aside without the knowledge of when it might be occupied, means of mortgaging or financing for the project to include on the associationâs bill, site abatement, locations for infrastructure, complete construction costs, and the understanding of the impact of a possible construction of a new police station nearby.
âI donât think theyâre big barriers; itâs simple, but not simple,â said Mr Reed.
After discussions and speculation about how the projectâs details would work out, authority member James Bernardi moved to make the draft motion a part of the record and approve the designation of no more than three acres at Fairfield Hills. âI move we accept the designation subject to conditions.â
Mr Herring explained that the association would begin fundraising.