Posts Tagged Deputy Chief Tim Leidig

Mundelein eliminates fire chief position

Excerpts from the ChicagoTribune.com:

Earlier this month, Mundelein decided not to fill its vacant fire chief position and instead promoted its police chief into a job that oversees both departments. Now officials say more government consolidation might be in the works.

Village Administrator John Lobaito said the new structure will be in place for 12 to 24 months as a trial run, while Mundelein researches options for sharing resources with neighboring municipalities. Nearby Countryside Fire Protection District has already expressed interest, according to Countryside Fire Chief Jeff Steingart.

“When everything started [with Mundelein], we opened the door to take a peek and begin a dialogue on what we can do together in the future,” Steingart said. “It’s still really early on and they’re reviewing all their options, but once things get settled in, our two leaderships will be sitting down together.”

Mundelein’s leadership change comes after more than three months without a fire chief or deputy fire chief. Tim Sashko retired April 30 when a neck injury resurfaced after eight years as fire chief. Shortly thereafter, Deputy Chief Tim Leidig took a job in West Chicago leaving Mundelein without a top fire administrator.

On Aug. 10, village trustees created a new position called public safety director to lead both the police and fire departments, and promoted Police Chief Eric Guenther into that job, essentially taking one administrator off the payroll.

“This is not necessarily the end game,” Lobaito said before trustees voted on Aug. 10. “It is intended to be in place until we decide it doesn’t work or until we find a better way.”

Battalion Chief Ben Yoder, who was doing all administrative duties the past three months, was promoted to deputy fire chief during that same Aug. 10 meeting. A series of internal promotions will yield one firefighter opening, Guenther said, but otherwise Mundelein will not add any new positions in either department.

The ordinance Mundelein approved specifically says the jobs of fire chief and police chief will not be eliminated, but rather left vacant in case trustees want to restore the old administrative system in the future.

In the meantime, Mundelein will save more than $135,000 by not replacing Sashko. According to payroll documents, Sashko’s final salary was $147,113 per year and Guenther’s new stipend is $971.66 per month. ($11,659)

Guenther’s salary as police chief is $153,340, according to payroll documents, which equates to a 7.6 percent annual raise.

Countryside already shares a lot of coverage with Mundelein’s fire department, Steingart said, and sharing more administrators wouldn’t be too complicated. The Countryside fire station along Midlothian Road is actually in Mundelein, although the fire district is not responsible for the surrounding Mundelein homes and shopping centers.

Countryside is an independent taxing body that provides fire services to approximately 35,000 residents in a 24-square-mile zone including parts of Vernon Hills, Lincolnshire, Long Grove, Hawthorn Woods, Indian Creek, Kildeer and unincorporated areas.

In the mid-1990s, when Mundelein’s boundaries inched closer to Countryside’s Midlothian Road fire station, representatives from both groups made an agreement, Steingart said: Countryside would help Mundelein along Midlothian Road and Mundelein would help Countryside along Route 45.

“I think we can work toward full consolidation, and not just Mundelein and Countryside, but other agencies too,” Steingart said. “That’s a long haul because there are a lot of moving pieces involved, such as needing to go to voters. But we all want to save lives and many of us help each other already.”

Consolidation is already moving forward in the dispatch area, Steingart pointed out. For several years, the Vernon Hills police department has operated a dispatch center that also coordinates Countryside, Lincolnshire police and Libertyville police and fire services.

That arrangement allows each municipality to reduce costs, while improving communication when issues arise, Steingart said, and a study is underway to see if an even bigger merger can occur. Further consolidation would allow for better prices by buying in bulk, expanding lower level jobs in a reorganization and improving service all without raising taxes.

Vernon Hills Police Chief Mark Fleischhauer, who is responsible for the dispatch center, expanded upon that subject during a July 7 village board meeting. He said the Lake County Emergency Telephone System Board is beginning a $350,000 study on the possibility of having one countywide dispatch center.

The Emergency Telephone System Board also contributed $2 million in August 2014 toward a new series of radio towers in Lake County that are owned by Illinois but designed and operated by Motorola, according to Lake County Board minutes. Lake County fronted the other $7 million to install the new technology, according to meeting minutes, because the radios used by sheriffs and public works crews are becoming obsolete.

Once those towers are in place, anyone with the new handheld radios and new dispatch center equipment can use the network, according to Lt. Mike Gregory of the Lake County Sheriff’s Office.

The Vernon Hills dispatch center is doing just that.

On July 7, Fleischhauer convinced Vernon Hills trustees to support the study for a consolidated county dispatch center and approve spending to switch the current dispatch center onto the Motorola network.

Previously, Vernon Hills used a small series of radio towers owned and maintained by a few local municipalities. Now, the cost for a radio network is being split between state agencies and a growing number of participating municipalities throughout Illinois.

Fleischhauer said if a countywide dispatch center is built, then crews in Vernon Hills, Lincolnshire, Libertyville and Countryside will already have the radios.

Mundelein police and fire services are not part of the consolidated dispatch center in Vernon Hills, and Mundelein officials say they’re still researching their options when it comes to radio networks.

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Mundelein fire chief retiring

Excerpts from the DailyHerald.com:

Mundelein Fire Chief Tim Sashko, who came to the department as chief in 2007, will leave the department at the end of the week for a post with a statewide industry group. Sashko, 56, will take over as executive director of the Illinois Fire Chiefs Association, an organization with which he’s worked closely for years.

In Mundelein, Sashko developed a community emergency response team for disaster planning and relief, helped rewrite the village’s emergency operations plan and created the village’s first citizens fire academy. He also was instrumental in the acquisition and restoration of the village’s first fire truck, an effort that coincided with the village’s centennial in 2009.

A traditional walkout ceremony for Sashko will be held next week at the main fire station. It was delayed so that his two sons, who are firefighters in Mundelein and Naperville, could attend.

Deputy Chief Tim Leidig will serve as interim chief until a permanent replacement is named. Lobaito said he hopes officials will be able to make that decision by August or September.

thanks Dan

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