The Daily Herald has another article on the split between the Village of Barrington Fire Department and the Barrington Countryside Fire Protection District.
The Barrington Fire Department and Barrington Countryside Fire Protection District went their separate ways as scheduled New Year’s Day — but not without some last-minute miscommunication. Even though the 48-square-mile fire district received 19 firefighters laid off by the village of Barrington at the stroke of midnight, those firefighters weren’t allowed to bring their individually fitted safety gear with them.
This forced the fire district to borrow gear from the Fox River Grove Fire Protection District a few days before the split, and to begin making arrangements to lease gear from elsewhere during the coming months.
Barrington Village Manager Jeff Lawler said the issue arose from the fact that the district didn’t hire the laid-off firefighters directly, but through the private contractor Paramedic Services of Illinois. “It is taxpayer property and we can’t just give it to someone else without the proper legal mechanism to do so,” Lawler said. He added that this issue was addressed in a conversation with fire district officials in early December and he didn’t understand how they could have overlooked it.
Barrington Countryside board President Tom Rowan said the conversation Lawler referred to is one only the village of Barrington seems to recall.
Because the fire district and village of Barrington co-owned all the equipment they shared during their decades-long contractual relationship, it was meant to be divided evenly at the end as all the vehicles were, Rowan said.
Barrington Countryside Fire Chief Jeff Swanson said that while rules should be followed, they should never get in the way of safety. While the legalistic separation of the gear could have been worked out over time, the firefighters needed to be using it on New Year’s Day, he said.
Barrington Countryside employs a total of 34 firefighters through Paramedic Services of Illinois. Only the 19 laid off from the Barrington Fire Department were affected by the dispute over the equipment. Swanson said the specially fitted equipment newly ordered for these employees isn’t expected to arrive until the spring. They will be using leased equipment in the meantime.
Apart from this issue, both agencies reported that they’ve been fulfilling all their operational responsibilities since the split. The Barrington Fire Department’s jurisdiction narrowed from covering the district as well to just the village’s five square miles.
Rowan said morale is high among the fire district’s new staff, evidenced by their cleaning all their equipment anew just after receiving it from the village of Barrington after midnight Wednesday morning.
Barrington Countryside covers parts of Barrington Hills, Lake Barrington, South Barrington, Inverness and unincorporated Cook, Lake and McHenry counties.
On a separate note, our information about the apparatus split is as follows:
The Village of Barrington Fire Department has:
- one engine
- the quint
- the battalion buggy
- two ambulances
The Barrington Countryside FPD has:
- Two engines
- the squad
- the tanker (in addition to a newly acquired tanker)
- two ambulances
At this point in time, we are unsure of the ownership of the brush unit.
#1 by John H on January 6, 2014 - 9:34 PM
What I don’t understand is that this is customized gear–customized for the individual that wears it. I understand that it was bought with taxpayer funds (correct?)…so if that’s the case, can’t it simply be sold for whatever its residual value is–considering that it is customized (so no secondary market value), used, etc.? Should have been able to buy for pennies on the dollar…
#2 by Jim on January 6, 2014 - 8:46 PM
Steve I don’t think a private company is taking over. A public fire protection district is taking over and hiring a private firm. While I am totally against this, I don’t understand how some things such as apparatus is being separated and some are not.
#3 by Steve on January 6, 2014 - 5:45 AM
If a private “for profit” company is taking over the fire business they they should supply equipment. “For profit” companies are designed to make money. They are not doing this out of the goodness of their hearts.
As it may save money in the short term there is a reason their cheep.
#4 by Tyler Tobolt on January 5, 2014 - 7:05 PM
Countryside has the Brush Truck.
#5 by Jim on January 5, 2014 - 5:37 PM
If you can’t give the gear to the district, how can you give them the rigs?