Archive for August, 2014

Geneva to buy new engine

The Daily Herald has an article reports that the Geneva Fire Department is buying a Pierce Enforcer pumper for  $506,022. This will replace a 30-year-old engine that will be offered for sale as surplus property. The old engine has an open-cab style that doesn’t meet National Fire Protection Association standards anymore.

thanks Dan

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Original Snorkel to be restored by Smeal

From The DesPlaines Valley News:

The vintage Bedford Park Fire Department Snorkel … that was possibly headed to the scrap yard has been rescued from oblivion.

Fire Chief Sean Maloy said the truck, which was the first original Snorkel manufactured in 1959, will be donated to Smeal Fire Apparatus of Snyder, Neb. “They said the Snorkel will be restored 100 percent to its condition when delivered to the Bedford Park Fire Department on March 31, 1960,” Maloy said.

The company will keep the Snorkel on display in its museum as well as take it to fire apparatus shows. Smeal bought the rights to the Snorkel name from LTI in June, Maloy said. “They plan to start building Snorkels again and want to show off the original truck at fire conferences,” Maloy said. “It will definitely be a marketing tool.”

“The truck will retain the Bedford Park name and markings,” Maloy said. “We will send them photos of the original truck so they make sure to get everything right.” Maloy said the company would pay the village $1 for the truck, which needs an estimated $60,000 in body and engine work.

“The village board was very happy to see the truck get a good home,” Maloy said. “The truck is an important part of firefighting history and I’m very happy to see it will be going to a good home.”

While the first Snorkel was converted from [a tree trimmer], GMC Pierce produced the first original Snorkel fire truck in 1959 for the Chicago Fire Department. “For some reason, they did not purchase it and it wound up in Bedford Park,” said Maloy. “I’m told Bedford Park got a good deal on it.” For the next 20 years, Bedford Park firefighters used the GMC Snorkel to battle fires and drive in parades.

Maloy praised this newspaper for helping to make this all possible.

thanks Drew

earlier posts are HERE and HERE

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New engine for Hebron

This from Jacob Combs:

The Hebron Alden Greenwood FPD received our new engine on 8/12/14.
The engine is a 2014 Spartan Metrostar/UST
450 HP Cummins ISL9
Seats 4
1500-GPM Hale QMAX
1000-gal water tank
BLS equipped
Extraction equipped
low hose bed
front mount suction

This engine replaces a 1984 Ford C/3D engine and a 1980/1997 FMC/Spartan/US Tanker (refurb) engine
Spartan fire engine

New 2014 Spartan Metro Star/UST 1500/1000 for Hebron Alden Greenwood Engine 841. Alex Vucha photo

fire engine pump panel

Alex Vucha photo

chevron stripoing on back of fire engine.

Alex Vucha photo

Spartan UST fire engine

Alex Vucha photo

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Bidgeview house fire, 8-9-14

This from Keith Grzadziel

Bridgeview had a working fire in a vacant house this past Saturday around 05:30 HRS at 7355 S. Roberts Rd. The first arriving company, Bedford Park Engine 711, had 3 hand lines in operation along with the ladder pipe from Roberts Park Ladder 31. Companies operated defensively for approximately an hour before the fire was knocked.
heavy fire through the roof of a house in Bridgeview 8-9-14.

heavy fire through the roof of a house in Bridgeview 8-9-14.

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BGA looks at municipal pensions in Cook County

An editorial article from PoliticsEarly&Often looks at municipal pension funds throughoutCook County:

There are 217 police and fire pension funds in suburban Cook County. The taxpayer-supported systems, with collective assets of nearly $5 billion, are intended to provide public safety workers and their families with stable retirement incomes. But a Better Government Association analysis found that dozens of local police and fire pension funds are in financial peril, putting retirement incomes at risk – as well as the fiscal health of numerous municipalities.

Rescuing the troubled funds may require tax hikes, service cuts or both, say experts. Already, some public safety agencies are looking to privatize or merge with neighboring departments in an effort to cut personnel and ease future pension payouts. Whatever the method, taxpayers can expect to bear a heavier cost burden because of the severe local pension shortfall. In all, unfunded liabilities for police and fire pension funds throughout suburban Cook County total $3.3 billion, according to a BGA analysis of the most recent municipal pension fund data.

Fifty-eight or roughly a quarter of the systems were less than half-funded, meaning there was fewer than 50 cents for every dollar owed in long-term benefits, according to the analysis. Generally, a minimum 80 percent funding is considered healthy. A state law approved in 2010 requires such pension plans to be 90 percent funded – by 2040.

At the current low funding levels the systems aren’t cushioned against investment losses, and may have to liquidate assets to pay benefits, raising the risk that some systems could run dry. In such a scenario, taxpayers could be responsible for any shortfall. If and how municipalities and pension funds can declare bankruptcy and get out from under financial obligations is unchartered terrain.

This municipal pension mess comes atop alarming money shortages in pension funds for employees of the State of Illinois, City of Chicago and Cook County. Each of those agencies has been trying to work out a legislative solution.

Without a doubt, the collective unfunded liabilities of those bigger pensions, in excess of $100 billon, are far greater than the combined suburban pension shortfall. However, the fire and police pension woes threaten to have a far greater financial impact on mid-sized and small municipalities because they have fewer viable options to raise revenues or cut costs to plug a pension hole.

 Who’s to blame for the problems on the municipal level – where there’s been little public discussion about solutions – depends on who you ask. Observers say reasons include chronic underfunding, sluggish investment returns, overly generous benefits and, in some cases, potentially improper pension sweeteners.

Statewide there are 660 police and fire retirement systems outside Chicago. State law requires towns with 5,000 or more residents and which employ at least one full-time police officer or firefighter to create and administer pension systems for those workers. A fire protection district must create a fund if it employs at least one full-time firefighter.

In suburban Cook County there are 121 police and 80 fire pension funds, plus 16 separate fire protection district pension funds. In all, there are 5,900 annuitants; an additional 8,500 police and firefighters could collect a pension down the road.

The BGA reviewed the finances of each system – by analyzing documents, and contacting every pension agency or municipality – and found 204, or 94 percent, were below the 80 percent threshold.

Other revelations include:

  • The fire pension funds in Blue Island, Cicero and Melrose Park have just 32 cents for every dollar owed, the lowest among systems with at least $2 million in assets.
  • On the police side, Blue Island, Burnham, Summit and Willow Springs ranked among the lowest, each with less than 30 cents for every dollar owed.
  • Until recently the Stone Park police fund had just seven cents for every dollar owed. The village issued a $2 million bond in April, in essence borrowing money to pay its pension debts. Its funding ratio now stands at an estimated 23 percent, the fund’s attorney says.
  • A search of municipal and state records uncovered examples of alleged pension sweetening in Alsip, Blue Island and at the Pleasantview Fire Protection District. In Alsip, for example, two police officers retired days after receiving “longevity bonuses” of more than $20,000 each. Over their lifetimes those pay bumps could result in total additional pension payments of $1.8 million, according to a BGA analysis.
  • From 2010 to 2013, the total annual required contributions for Harvey’s police and fire funds was $10.1 million. State records show the south suburb, however, paid just $140 during that four-year span.

The Illinois Department of Insurance oversees pension funds statewide but historically there was little the agency could do if public safety workers got a last-minute pension boost, or a municipality didn’t meet its obligations. The department could levy a modest civil penalty but such fines were rarely issued. In short, there’s been little oversight to this point. Soon there could be repercussions, though.

The state law adopted by legislators in 2010 also empowers pension funds to intercept (in gradually increasing increments) sales taxes, grants and other revenues owed to the towns by the state if the required contributions aren’t made. That doesn’t take effect until 2016 but the law’s impact is already being felt, though not necessarily in ways that rank-and-file police and firefighters may appreciate.

North Riverside may privatize its fire department in part because of concerns that the village would go broke if it couldn’t afford its pension obligations and state revenues were intercepted, North Riverside Village Attorney Burt Odelson says.

The BGA found at least three other Cook County suburbs – Chicago Ridge, Forest View and McCook – are exploring or have already picked a cost-saving alternative to a municipal-run fire department. Rising pensions costs and concerns that precious state revenues could be garnished has brought the towns to this point. Chicago Ridge and Forest View are weighing the benefits of joining a fire protection district, or paying a neighboring town to provide the emergency service, among other options.

McCook, however, has made up its mind to shutter its fire department and hire a private company. Beginning Aug. 4, employees of New Lenox-based Kurtz Paramedic Service Inc. will fight fires and respond to emergency calls, says McCook Mayor Jeff Tobolski, adding the move will save an estimated $600,000 annually.

thanks Dan

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Evanston buying new tractor-drawn aerial

An article from EvanstonNow:

Evanston aldermen [were] scheduled to approve spending just over $1 million to purchase a new aerial ladder truck for the city’s fire department.

The new rear-tiller steered Pierce truck, equipped with a 100-foot aerial ladder, would replace a similar 23-year-old model that officials say is in poor condition.

Three years ago the city replaced its other aerial ladder truck, a 1990 model, with a new one for $958,000. That purchase was largely funded by a $600,000 federal homeland security grant.

The city has failed to qualify for a similar grant for the new truck, and so it plans to fund the purchase of the new vehicle — which has a projected 20-year life cycle — through general obligation bonds issued this year.

The articulated tiller design of the truck is designed to provide a tighter turning radius to more easily maneuver Evanston’s narrow streets.

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New ambulance for Northwest Homer FPD

This from Martin Nowak:

Ambulance 1714 – 2014 Ford F-350/Horton. More photos here: https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.447398765402852.1073741960.263644870444910&type=3&uploaded=18 

 
Photos by Kevin and I. 
Horton Type I ambulance

New ambulance for the Northwest Homer FPD. Martin Nowak photo

Horton ambulance

Martin Nowak photo

Horton Type I ambulance

Kevin Griffin photo

Horton Type I ambulance

Northwest Homer Ambulance 1714. Kevin Griffin photo

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New contract for Downers Grove

The Chicago Tribune has an article about a new contract for firefighters in Downers Grove:

Downers Grove’s firefighters are set to receive salary bumps in each of the next three years, according to the terms of a new contract.

Village council members voted 5-1 on Aug. 5 to approve the agreement, which stipulates base salary raises of 3 percent this year, 2 percent in 2015, and 1 percent in 2016.

The firefighters’ union ratified the contract on July 24 by an overwhelming majority, according to union President Rob Pekelder. The union represents 70 full-time firefighters, paramedics, engineers, lieutenants, captains and the director of emergency medical services.

The percentage increases apply across the same experience levels. For example, a starting firefighter/paramedic will receive a salary of $65,701, a 3 percent increase from last year’s pay of $63,787. That rate will increase to $67,685 in 2016, according to contract documents. But actual percentage increases for employees will be significantly higher as they progress through steps in accordance with their years of service. There are seven steps, for those hired after May 1, 2011. So a firefighter/paramedic with two years of experience, for example, will be paid $73,439 this year and $79,196 in 2015, a 7.8 percent raise. A firefighter now with four years experience with the village, for example, will earn $81,717 this year, up from $79,337. A firefighter/paramedic with four years of service will earn $86,621 up from $84,098.

All union members who reach the end of the set salary ranges will be eligible for one-time bonuses between $750 and $1,500 during the life of the contract, depending on their level of experience. Union members are prohibited from endorsing or participating in any type of strike, the contract states.

Commissioner Bob Barnett, who voted no … refused to endorse this contract, mirroring his opposition to other collective bargaining agreements for police officers, emergency dispatchers and public works employees over the past two years. “Once again, we’ve put into our contract conditions that commit our residents to pay for pay increases with no recourse if the economy tanks,” Barnett said. “Basically our only way out of this would be to fire people.”

The contract is backdated to May, so the 3 percent raise union members would have received over the past three months will provided in lump sums in an upcoming paycheck, Baker said. Subsequent raises will go into effect in May of each year.

thanks Dan

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New engine for Hoffman Estates

This from Mark Sissulak:

I was driving past station 22 on Monday and saw a new engine in quarters.  I found this on Ferrara’s website
Not sure when it was delivered but it looks to be in service
Ferrara fire engine

Ferrara photo

Ferrara fire engine

New fire engine for Hoffman Estates, IL. Ferrara photo

H-5406 Hoffman Estates, IL

Type: Custom Rescue Pumper
Chassis: Igniter Custom Chassis
Body: Stainless steel
Pump: Hale – QMAX-XS 1000-2250 GPM
Tank: 500 gallon water

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Area ambulance deliveries

From the Foster Coach Facebook page:

Horton Type I ambulance

Maple Park FPD. Foster Coach photo

Horton Type I ambulance

Maple Park FPD. Foster Coach photo

From the Fire Service, Inc. Facebook page

ambulance photo

New Wheeled Coach unit for Aurora Medic 8. Fire Service, Inc. photo

Aurora ambulance photo

Fire Service Inc. photoAu

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