Thursday, June 21, 2012
Hamden Central Fire Station Returns Fully Renovated
Fire units return to old home in Hamden (video)
Published: Thursday, June 21, 2012
By Ann DeMatteo, Register Staff
adematteo@nhregister.com / Twitter: @annddematteo
HAMDEN — After 32 months away from the center of town, Squad 1 and Rescue 1 are back in the fire station at Memorial Town Hall.
“The goal was to get them back in here as soon as I could,” Fire Chief David A. Berardesca said this week.
Firefighters and apparatus that worked out of what is known as Station 4 were transferred to other firehouses in fall 2009, when the Memorial Town Hall renovation began.
Town Hall renovations are incomplete; the police station has moved to some Town Hall space, as well as a 40,000-square-foot addition. This summer, Berardesca, Deputy Fire Chief Bob Surprise and their administrative staff will move from Hamden Government Center to space in Town Hall.
Berardesca and firefighters say they are happy with the upgrade, which includes a new exhaust system and heaters in the garage bay.
The kitchen had been in the formerly dingy basement and now is on the second floor, in an all-purpose room where firefighters can relax in large lounge chairs and watch a large-screen television on off hours.
There are also four new bunks, new lockers, a room for the watch commander and new bathrooms and showers. The exercise room is in the basement. The whole station has been painted.
“It’s a welcome relief. It’s nice to be back home,” said Firefighter Paul Turner after he backed Squad 1, a fire pumper, into the bay Monday morning.
Now that the truck has returned to Station 4 from the Ridge Road fire station, and Rescue 1 has come back from Mount Carmel, response times will improve, Berardesca said. When Station 4 closed, other stations had to expand their territories, meaning firefighters sometimes took a bit longer to arrive at calls.
While contractors continue to work on “punch list” items for the fire station, the Town Building Committee is working to be sure the cracked mahogany doors on the garage bay are replaced. The cracking was noticed soon after the doors were installed late last year.
“While it was probably not the best choice of materials for a fire station, they were installed and it was realized the wood was faulty,” said Curt Leng, chief administrative officer.
The doors are going to be replaced soon with a more traditional metal fire station door that will have a mahogany look. The company that provided the doors will pay for the new ones, Leng said.
Other mahogany doors throughout the refurbished Town Hall have faulty wood and discussions are under way to replace them with other wood doors or with mahogany-looking doors, Leng said.
It is expected Town Hall will reopen at the end of the year, after the two old police station buildings are remediated, razed and a parking garage built, Leng said.
Heat Wave, A Tropical Heat Wave - Take it Serious!
Municipalities throughout the area have opened cooling centers.
Due to the extreme heat forecast, Mayor Scott Jackson has established Town "Cooling Stations" and also wishes to remind residents that all public buildings, including libraries and fire stations, are air-conditioned and open to the public during regular business hours.
The cooling station is meant for temporary respite from the heat, especially for the elderly and those with respiratory issues.
Hamden cooling stations and hours are:
The Keefe Community Cente,r located at the corner of Dixwell Ave. and Pine Street, until 7 p.m. this evening.
Thornton Wilder Hall, located in the Miller Library Complex at 2901 Dixwell Avenue, is a cooling station and will have water available to those in need. Thornton Wilder Hall be open to the public until 11 p.m.
Hamden fire stations are also available.
Information on all Town buildings and hours can be found on the Town website at www.hamden.com or by calling 203-287-7100.
For further information, please contact the Fire Chief Berardesca's office at 203-407-5880.
Saturday, June 16, 2012
Monday, June 11, 2012
Monday
Monday, Monday .... So good to me ....
Whoever wrote that clearly doesn't know what the word Monday means.
- Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone
Whoever wrote that clearly doesn't know what the word Monday means.
- Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone
Thursday, June 07, 2012
Working to Solve Hamden Pension Crisis
By Ann DeMatteo, Register Staff
adematteo@nhregister.com / Twitter: @annddematteo
HAMDEN — The Legislative Council took initial steps Wednesday night toward finding a solution for the drastically underfunded pension fund, but answers won’t come for another six months.
A council committee unanimously agreed to a bid waiver to hire The Segal Co. as a pension plan design consultant for $90,000. The full council will take action Monday.
Council members wanting to be sure the information would be available before the 2013-14 budget is final asked how long it would take to get the information. Curt Leng, Mayor Scott D. Jackson’s chief aide, said it would take about six months.
In response to another question, Leng said he believes “information will flow” about what the consultant is learning as time goes on. Already, he said, the mayor has had discussions with unions and is looking at working collaboratively with council members. “Without the unions being partners, a comprehensive solution can’t be reached,” Leng said.
Leng said the mayor was seeking a bid waiver because Segal, based in Atlanta, already is working for the town on health insurance and pension matters. “They’re very good at this and we want experts with good qualifications to develop a comprehensive solution,” he said.
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