When Clinton was president he was proud of a program that created 100,000 new cops on the streets—that is what he said. Actually it was under 50,000—and that lasted for only three years till the Federal funding ran out. Barack saw this grand project of the Clinton years and decided to do the same, but with firefighters.

Now that the three years of Federal funds have run out, the firefighters hired have to be fired. Hundreds of thousands paid to train them, now, as expected, the local governments do not have the money to keep them. What recovery. Auburn (in the Sacramento area) is about to fire one third of their police. In the past couple of week’s folks in San Luis Obispo County voted 60% NOT to tax themselves to keep their Obama firefighters. As we approach fire season, thanks to Obama, the firefighters are disorganized.

“Things were looking up for the Auburn City Fire Department a two years ago when it received a $690,000 SAFER (Staffing for Adequate Fire and Emergency Response) grant from the state. It funded five full-time firefighters that allowed the 16 person department to staff a second engine company.

But that grant has not been renewed and the department is now looking to layoff a third of its department. Department officials says the extra fire fighters allowed it to develop prevention education programs and do fire inspections of businesses and defensible space rules at homes.”

091113- bho-sm

 

Auburn Fire Department Faces Layoffs

Fox40, 4/18/14

Ahead of what looks to be a busy fire season, the Auburn Fire Department is faced with layoffs.

Things were looking up for the Auburn City Fire Department a two years ago when it received a $690,000 SAFER (Staffing for Adequate Fire and Emergency Response) grant from the state. It funded five full-time firefighters that allowed the 16 person department to staff a second engine company.

“Our response times to medical emergencies and fires has dropped almost 30 percent, which is great,” Department Division Chief Tom Carlisle said.

But that grant has not been renewed and the department is now looking to layoff a third of its department. Department officials says the extra fire fighters allowed it to develop prevention education programs and do fire inspections of businesses and defensible space rules at homes.

Before the added staff, it was all the department could do to keep up with fire and medical calls. The department has three fire stations, but only one is staffed. The other two are volunteer stations that are only activated during a fire.

The city council apparently knows the value of the extra fire fighters, but several have said they don’t know where money can be found in the budget to keep current staffing levels. Some have said saving a few jobs may the best they can do, if that.

If they are laid off, some will go back to the ranks of volunteers.

“Their availability to us would be greatly diminished due to the fact that they’ll have jobs somewhere else,” Carlisle said.

The fire department is not unlike many other police and fire agencies that chose to apply for temporary grant money to retain services, knowing the money was not a steady source of income.

The city is late in developing its budget this year and should have a final determination by July. The grant ends in September in the middle of the fire season in the foothills.

 

Previous Post

Next Post

 (1 comment so far)
Got something to say? Post a comment.

 
By posting you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy
   

Steven Schnaudt

Funding for the SAFER grant program was first included in the Fiscal Year 2005 Homeland Security Appropriations bill. Bush was president then. Though I don’t disagree that many communities have miserably failed to develop contingent plans for maintaining grant funded firefighter positions, I think it is quite disingenuous to refer the them as “Obama Firefighters” as this program has existed for 10 years and has always received tremendous bipartisan support.

April 21, 2014 at 7:23 am

Thumb up 0 Thumb down 0

Reply