The Hillsborough NC Fire Department bought a new aluminum Aerial Ladder
truck from Sutphen
Corporation for $58K, It has an aluminum ladder recycled from a truck in
Syracuse, N.Y.
The Dover Delaware Volunteer Fire Department
quotes that a new replacement Aerial truck will cost $930k.
Hillsborough article and Dover truck quotes
below:
58k Cost of New Fire Truck
New Fire Truck to Improve Safety in Hillsborough
WHAT: Official delivery of
Orange Rural Fire Department’s new fire truck
WHEN: 10 a.m. Nov. 22
WHERE: Orange Rural Fire Department’s main station, 206 S. Churton St. in downtown Hillsborough
Come Nov. 22, the Orange Rural Fire Department
will have a new weapon against fire: a 95-foot aerial platform ladder truck
with a price tag that saves the Town of Hillsborough a quarter of a million
dollars.WHEN: 10 a.m. Nov. 22
WHERE: Orange Rural Fire Department’s main station, 206 S. Churton St. in downtown Hillsborough
The department and town will officially
receive delivery of the truck at 10 a.m. Nov. 22 at the main fire station, 206
S. Churton St., in downtown Hillsborough. The town contracts for fire service
through the private, nonprofit corporation.
The new, standard edition fire truck will
cost the town about $754,000 — $250,000 less than similar new trucks thanks to
a ladder recycled from a truck in Syracuse, N.Y. Equipment needed for the truck
— including a hose, nozzles, air packs, prying tools, scene lights and two-way
radios — will cost $58,000.
The truck and ladder are made of aluminum,
making the new truck about 15,000 pounds lighter than an equivalent steel
model. The lighter, aluminum ladder will do less damage to the truck’s engine;
and town streets and parking lots will see less damage from the combined lighter
truck and ladder.
“We will have the lowest-priced truck of
this kind in the county, and it will provide the same level of service as its
more expensive counterparts,” Orange Rural Fire Department Chief Jeff Cabe
said.
The new truck will ensure the department is
better able to fight fires in Hillsborough, particularly in the town’s newest
buildings. The truck’s taller ladder and greater extension will enable
firefighters to spray water onto fires from above, better fighting fires by
ensuring more water reaches a fire’s center. Due to Durham Tech’s immediate
surroundings, the ladder on the department’s 75-foot aerial truck cannot reach
the top of the two-story community college in the Waterstone development.
The current truck has a 75-foot reach.
Achieving the highest extension would require placing the truck’s back end
directly against a building on fire. For protection, the trucks must be placed
at a distance from buildings, with a greater distance likely needed for newer
buildings that are surrounded by sidewalks, green setbacks and parking lots.
Hillsborough will use $600,000 in fire
capital contributions from the Waterstone development to help pay for the new
truck as the development’s larger, taller buildings — including a planned UNC
hospital — contributed to the Fire Department’s need for a truck with a taller
ladder. The contributions — of which the town has received $400,000 — were
negotiated as part of the town’s approval for the 330-acre, mixed-use
development by Interstate 40. The funds help pay for Waterstone’s impact on
fire protection.
The Fire Department’s current aerial truck
is a 1987 model made by a company no longer operating. Finding parts to
maintain the truck increasingly has become difficult, with Orange Rural often
relying on Deputy Chief Mac Cabe to find and modify similar parts for use on
the truck.
“The ladder is the part that never really
wears out,” said Chief Cabe, who is the deputy chief’s brother. He noted the
department has been assured the same warranty and quality for the refurbished
ladder as a new ladder.
The department’s new truck was made by
Sutphen Corp., a family-owned business since 1890 that is recognized throughout
the United States as a premier ladder truck company. The trucks have proven
themselves in North Carolina’s climate with a number of them used in
departments outside of Orange County, including Durham and Winston-Salem.
Cost of New Fire Engines
Dover Delaware Volunteer Fire Department post
2014
Pumper Engine $700,000 ($550,000 plus $100,000
to $150,000 to outfit the engine.)
Aerial or Ladder $930,000 ($840,000 plus
$150,000 to $200,000 for outfitting
Comments:
Voters with sticker shock over the cost of government are
digging into the details. The cost of
fire trucks is under scrutiny.
Trillion dollar a year “stimulus” grants have marshalled
legions of sales teams to present slick presentations to city councils, county
commissions and government purchasing committees across the U.S.
These decision makers are prone to error to the high side.
They continue to spend too much of our money for what we get. That’s why voters need to monitor these costs.
Norb Leahy Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
No comments:
Post a Comment