California Chief Proposes Firehouse Closures And Volunteer Staffing

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DUANE W. GANG
The Press Enterprise

To help save more than $4.3 million a year, Riverside County's fire chief is proposing closing stations in El Cerrito, Blythe and Oasis and converting three more to volunteer staffing only.

The recommendations - including reducing staff at six other stations - go before the Board of Supervisors on Tuesday and are aimed at helping overcome a $6 million shortfall in the department's budget.

"We must make the best choice of bad alternatives," Chief John Hawkins said by telephone Thursday. "We are at that point now."

The county contracts with Cal Fire for fire protection and provides services for unincorporated areas, 19 cities and one community services district. The department has more than 90 stations across the county.

Cal Fire management in Sacramento has agreed to provide the county about $2.2 million in administrative savings this year. Half of that will be passed on to contract cities, leaving the county department with a $4.9 million budget gap to fill.

Last month, supervisors approved the criteria, such as proximity to other stations, which Hawkins and his staff used to make the current closure recommendations.

"The goal is not to short any community but to try to close the budget gap," Hawkins said.

But he said developing the recommendations wasn't easy and acknowledged sleepless nights over the issue. "This is very difficult," he said.

Hawkins' proposal to the board totals $4.38 million in savings for fiscal 2010-11 and would affect more than 65 employees - from rank-and-file firefighters to captains. Among the recommendations:

- Close station 15 at 20320 Temescal Canyon Road in the unincorporated community of El Cerrito. Instead, the county would contract with the Corona Fire Department for service to the community.

- Shutter station 43 in downtown Blythe and upgrade stations in nearby Ripley and Blythe Airport to serve the area. The change would leave eight firefighters on duty each day instead of nine.

- Close station 42 in rural Oasis and shift staff to station 40 in Mecca.

- Cal Fire management in Sacramento has agreed to help the county by shifting state-funded engines to county stations, allowing reductions in county-paid staff. The moves would take place in the communities of Goodmeadow, Glenoaks, Cherry Valley and Sage.

- Convert station 51 in El Cariso off the Ortega Highway near Lake Elsinore from career staff to the county's new reserve volunteer program.

- The county would do the same for station 63 in Poppet Flats near Banning and station 77 at Lake Riverside near rural Aguanga in southwest Riverside County.

Reserve Program

Supervisors on Tuesday will take up the final adoption of two ordinances creating the new reserve program, something that remains controversial among many of the county's 500 volunteer firefighters.

Under the program, the Fire Department will absorb the county's volunteers into a reserve force similar to Sheriff's Department reserve deputies.

Board of Supervisors Chairman Marion Ashley said Thursday that the county must do something to bridge the department's budget gap. Unless money can be found elsewhere, the reductions will be necessary, he said.

"This is a really tough situation, and I know that the chief does not want to make these recommendations," Ashley said. "This is definitely going to hurt our county Fire Department."

Cal Fire engines assigned to locally funded stations will help provide coverage during the winter months, and Ashley said he appreciates the state agency's willingness to help the county through its fiscal challenges.

But he said he is concerned about what might happen during fire season.

Those engines are state assets that could be called away to battle a wildfire in another part of the state, he said.

"Then what are we going to do?" Ashley said. "This is a concern of mine."

Supervisor John Benoit, who represents the Blythe and Oasis areas, said closing the budget gap is a necessity, but the recommendations are far from a done deal.

Benoit said he wants to consider other alternatives, such as reducing staffing at stations, rather than closing some.

"I am going to ask the chief some tough questions about that," Benoit said.

In a letter to County Executive Officer Bill Luna, Hawkins said there is "no simple answer to the gap between public safety expectations and funds available to deliver those services."

"Of course, if times were not as dire as they are and if revenues were matching cost expenditures, we would never bring forward these suggested reductions," Hawkins added in his letter.

He said he hopes that when the economy recovers, the department can restore any cut services.

"Our entire plan is based on continuing to deliver service to the public without complaining about required budget reductions," Hawkins wrote.

Copyright 2010 The Press Enterprise, Inc.
All Rights Reserved
December 3, 2010

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Tough Decisions. Good for the Chief for trying to work out options.
Never an easy decision....
yes, this issue covers my neighborhood area to my east-south-west of my home... so it is pretty serious here...
good example of being "Proactive" instead of "Reactive". I hope that the Career FF's & Volunteer FF's will work together as Professionals. Because as so many seem to forget sometimes, it is not about their best interest, but the best interest of the communities that they serve. I am a "Union" Career Firefighter, but I am also "Pro Volunteer" for the areas that simply do not have the funds for a "career department" and for the areas that need a boost in personnel, but do not have the funds to hire more.

Sgt. Christian
Quad 5/Engine 2

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