The Daily Herald has an article about the ballot initiative for an ambulance tax in Antioch:
Voter denial Tuesday of ballot questions to establish a tax for ambulance service has officials in Antioch and Antioch Township scrambling to determine what’s next.
Immediate changes aren’t envisioned but service cuts translating to longer response times are possibilities in coming weeks or months as village and First Fire Protection District leaders explore options for continued operations. Whether voters should be asked again for support next spring is another tough question to be answered as the weight of a $2.7 million annual budget strains other areas.
“Antioch has been a cultural anomaly to have a core service that was not funded in any way by tax money. People are astounded by that fact,” Village Administrator James Keim said. “That is now a service the governments and entities that exist have to provide and there is a void in funding. It’s not easily understood.”
Voters in the village and in Antioch Township defeated questions to establish a property tax to provide ambulance service to about 27,000 residents. The measure would have raised an estimated $1.5 million the first year and cost the owner of a property valued at $100,000 an additional $835. Unofficial figures showed voters opposed the measure 2,139 to 1,925 in the village and 2,018 to 1,417 in the township.
Ambulance service for fire or rescue calls in the Antioch area since 1938 had been provided by the Antioch Rescue Squad, a nonprofit group funded by fees and donations. That changed in May when the fire protection district of Antioch did not renew the contract and decided to consolidate operations in the village and township under the Antioch Fire Department.
The Antioch Fire Department uses part-time paid-on-call firefighters and contracts for paramedic service. The department and fire district share three stations and equipment. Costs are split by the village through its general fund, which covers a variety of day-to-day operations, and the fire protection district through its cash reserves. While each entity can tax for fire operations, they need voter approval to do so for emergency medical services, which are the measures that failed, Antioch Fire Chief John Nixon said.
Operations had been expanded at the third fire station to improve response time, according to Nixon. The goal was to make that permanent and have three fully-staffed stations to cover a 36-square-mile area. But that may not be possible.
The village is in an unsustainable mode regarding revenues and overall services it provides, Keim said.
thanks Dan
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#1 by ffpm571 on November 8, 2014 - 9:00 AM
the ARS was mismanaged ” good old boys “club for years. They allowed theft, sexual harassment, and poor patient care. Hey its ok we are all about the community, Just ask them as they gave away all their assets to anyone but the village and township of Antioch.
#2 by Jim on November 7, 2014 - 8:22 PM
JSvens,
Why would they renew anything with the rescue squad? They turned their backs on the village when they gave away what was donated to them from the residents.
#3 by Mike on November 7, 2014 - 7:14 PM
Here is from an outsider who has been watching this go on for years…
This failure didn’t happen last night, so while it’s frustrating it’s not your guys fault.
This failure happened many years ago when the lack of going to the public with what’s really going on and the fact that some of the leadership at that time not only were uneducated about the importance of fire based EMS, but the fact that they willfully knew what was going on and didn’t do anything to inform the public.
When the ARS disbanded this year I never read word 1 about the fact that they donated everything that was bought and paid for by resident donations, to other towns just so they could cause disfunction to the AFD…
The other history legacy that people forget is this. The AFPD is an appoint board that is appointed by the township supervisor whom at the time was a deputy chief of the ARS. Which is a total conflict of interest and allowed this issue to build and fester.
Never in all the times that the referendum has been run have I ever seen anything staying to the public about any of these issues.
While it isn’t the best to air dirty laundry, stuff like this needs to be made public so the taxpayers understand, same as the fact that ARS was asking the AFPD for financial support because even they knew that the good old days of doing things for free are long gone.
I really hope the leadership of AFD has a solid plan for this and hope that they spend the next 6 months educating the residents as much as possible so come spring they can run this again and be successful.
#4 by JSvens on November 7, 2014 - 1:09 PM
There is an easy and obvious solution: renew the contact with the Antioch Rescue Squad.