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Speedy
fire district meeting skirts money issues
By
Meg Olson
Community
members were at the last fire district #5 meeting with questions
about the districtÕs finances and policies, but fire commission
chair Jesse Lofquist and acting commissioner Davea Fisher werenÕt
much in the mood to talk about it.
Fisher and
Lofquist are the only ones left on the dais after the resignation
in December of John Fisher and Don Frantz absent for a holiday
projected to last several months. Lofquist would have been on
his own if not for an emergency meeting held December 15. At that
meeting Davea Fisher, then recording secretary, was appointed
to replace her husband on the board until March.
At the January
16 meeting of the board Bruno Moras asked if reports in the January
All Point Bulletin of a crunch in fire department finances were
true. ÒNot completely,Ó Lofquist answered. ÒFire districts all
over the country are challenged with a shortfall of funds. We
constantly strive to provide the highest level of service with
the dollars available.Ó Lofquist did not specify the inaccuracy;
however, all figures reported in the January edition of the All
Point Bulletin were taken from budget documents released by North
Whatcom Fire and Rescue Services (NWFRS), of which the Point Roberts
fire district is part. ÒRevenues are $192,000 and expenditures
are $304,000,Ó said Martin Mansfield. ÒHow is that not a problem?Ó
The NWFRS budget summary for the fire district prepared by NWFRS
finance director Kent McLelland projects expenditures of $292,000.
Projected tax revenues are $192,000 but revenues also include
lease payments of $14,000 from bingo operations and $18,000 from
the Wellness Clinic and drawing $50,000 from department reserves.
ÒThatÕs
not the purpose of this meeting,Ó Lofquist said. The bulk of the
meeting was instead devoted to the minutiae of the previous monthÕs
bills. Fisher and Lofquist questioned close to a dozen specific
expenditures, from legal costs shared among the three member districts
of NWFRS to a $400 bill from an office supply company for file
cabinets. ÒIt just looked like a lot of paper clips to me.Ó There
was also discussion about working with the department of labor
and industries on an exhaust problem in the station and Fisher
presented the results of Internet research on purchasing a glass
case for posting notices at the Benson Road fire station. ÒThere
has been some concern there be an official place where fire department
news is posted,Ó she said. Joyce Kiniski was also appointed as
the new recording secretary.
Lofquist
announced that letters had been sent to the three parties who
submitted bids to purchase the Julius fire station on Gulf Road.
He said the board had decided to accept the bid from the water
district for $90,099 and sent the district a letter outlining
the fire departments terms and conditions of sale. According to
minutes of the December 15 emergency meeting the board made the
decision at that time.
The letter
received by the water district suggested a closing date for the
sale of the station on or before March 1 and set two conditions.
The first is the property is to be sold as is. The second is the
fire department is permitted to continue to park vehicles in the
station for up to two years or until the Benson Road fire station
is renovated.
District
manager Dan Bourks said commissioners would discuss the conditions
of sale at their next meeting. ÒI want to forward everything to
our attorney,Ó Bourks said. He was skeptical that the water district
could legally pay for a building with public funds and then allow
another entity to use it. ÒYou canÕt gift public monies so I assume
theyÕd have to pay rent.Ó The next highest bidder for the property,
the Point Roberts Parks and Recreation District, could forseeably
face the same issue.
At their
January 16 meeting the fire district board also signed the lease
of a portion of the fire station to the Point Roberts Wellness
Clinic. There was no discussion but Lofquist made a statement
before he and Fisher unanimously approved the lease. ÒI have had
the opportunity to be involved in this process and I approve of
it,Ó he said.
Lofquist
also announced a tightening of the districtÕs policy for public
information requests. ÒAll requests will be made in writing,Ó
he said. ÒThe board will not accept handwritten, telephone or
email requests.Ó A written copy of the districtÕs policy was not
available.
The policy
is a change from that under previous administration and contravenes
the state Open Public Records Act. The act requires agencies to
make all public records available for inspection and copying during
their regular office hours, to publish and display rules of policy
and procedure. Public records must be available from 9 a.m. to
noon and 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday if an agency has
office hours of less than 30 hours a week.
Agencies
are further directed to adopt and enforce Òreasonable rules and
regulationsÓ that provide Òthe fullest assistance to inquirers
and the most timely action possible on requests,Ó and are required
to Òhonor requests by mail,Ó with no specification to what form
it is submitted in. Agencies have five days to respond to a request
for a document.
Lofquist
allowed further public comments at the close of the meeting and
there were several questions about putting the facility in the
fire station. ÒWhy is it coming here at a premium of $800 a month,Ó
asked Tom Hollett. ÒThe whole exercise of the Wellness Clinic
was very complex,Ó Lofquist answered. ÒIt required the fire department
to be involved and along those lines the most practical place
for it to be was here.Ó
As the questions
swung back to financial issues and how the sale of the Julius
Station was being handled, commissioners clammed up again. ÒIÕm
not going to get into this conversation at this time,Ó Lofquist
said. ÒIf there is a concern on the part of the public I encourage
them to write them and send them to commissioners.Ó
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