TRISH HARTMAN
WNEP
Reprinted with Permission
SCRANTON, Pa. - There has been some fallout from Tuesday's vote in Dunmore. Voters there said no to a referendum that would have allowed the borough to raise taxes to fund the fire department.
Now other fire departments are responding to the vote and the Dunmore fire chief said in a dangerous way.
In the wake of this week's landslide "No" note in Dunmore, Scranton's Fire Department is now backing off.
While Scranton's fire chief said they will still help Dunmore in case of a fire, Scranton firefighters won't respond to a call until they know it's actually a fire.
It's a decision that has Dunmore's chief worried.
Scranton Fire Chief Tom Davis made a trip to Dunmore's fire department this week.
He told Dunmore's chief Scranton will not respond to automatic fire alarms, only confirmed structure fires.
Davis said the decision comes after Dunmore voters struck down a referendum to raise taxes to fund Dunmore's fire department.
He said the burden should not fall on Scranton taxpayers.
"We will go on any structure fire that we have and they need our help, we're going to assist them but we're not going to go up there on non-fire calls," Davis added.
Earlier this year, to save money, Dunmore's fire department went from five firefighters and three trucks in service per shift to three or four firefighters and two trucks in service.
That's when Scranton started responding to automatic alarms to help Dunmore.
Dunmore's fire chief said the first few minutes of a fire are the most crucial and firefighters would like to work with council to come up with a better solution now that the Scranton Fire Department is no longer responding to first alarm fires.
Dunmore council members said Scranton's fire crews were responding to mostly false alarms anyway.
They also said Dunmore has the advantage of having a paid fire department, not volunteer so those fire fighters are always at the station, ready to go.
Still, some Dunmore business owners are concerned.
"Dunmore only has a limited number of trucks and firefighters and if the fire chief says that's unsafe, they should go with his opinion," said Celeste Gotron of The Green Leaf Organics.
As for how to find more funding for Dunmore's fire department because the tax was voted down, council members said they still have to meet and talk about a solution.
Dunmore's next council meeting is Monday night at 7 p.m.
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