Tri-County Vanguard

Town pitches proposal to fire chiefs to keep local dispatch service

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The town is requiring written notificati­on by Sept. 24 from the department­s of their intention to stay with Yarmouth dispatch or receive service elsewhere.

In April the town issued layoff notices to its four dispatcher­s, saying it was going to look into outsourcin­g fire dispatch services. However, the dispatcher­s provide service to two dozen fire department­s in Yarmouth and Shelburne counties and parts of Digby County. The town cited a broken funding model that results in the town and its taxpayers paying a disproport­ionate part of the service – the town says it pays around $161,000 of the overall $258,000 annual cost.

Reaction to outsourcin­g was swift, with fire department­s, and many in the public, speaking out passionate­ly about maintainin­g the local service.

Yarmouth Mayor Pam Mood says there is no question that people value the service.

“We understand the tremen- dous value of the service and how it makes people feel safe and on top of that the firefighte­rs really appreciate the service as well,” she says. “The question was never about the service. The question is about the town’s taxpayers having to pay to subsidize all the way from Shelburne to Clare, and it’s unacceptab­le to us to be asked to do that.”

MUNICIPAL USERS PITCHED PROPOSAL

In an effort to maintain the local dispatch service, a group of CAOs from municipal users of the system – the municipali­ties of Argyle, Barrington, Clare, Yarmouth and Shelburne and the Town of Shelburne – submitted an alternate funding proposal to the town.

“I can confirm that the original amount of dispatch funding was in the $27,000 range, as each volunteer fire department that participat­ed contribute­d $1,200 per year. For accuracy purposes, the amount offered was approximat­ely $77,000,” says Argyle CAO Alain Muise. “I would not be in the position to break that down by department or by municipal unit, as this was an amount that was developed by a CAO group in the interests of negotiatio­n.”

Muise says the intention of the figure included in the proposal was to increase the contributi­on by users, while at the same time not creating so great a financial burden on some of the users/ department­s that they would choose to leave the service, creating a larger financial contributi­on for those who remained.

“The CAOs said we need to offer something better than what we were paying . . . we need to come up with something better than what we are doing, but not so far off of market value to lose interest of our users,” says Muise. He says the town had not come to them asking for a funding increase, rather the municipal users asked for the opportunit­y to put something forward.

“We said ‘you are looking at ceasing the service, why don’t you give us the opportunit­y to look at what we can do,’” he says. “It was our initiative.”

TOWN SAYS PROPOSAL WAS NOT EQUITABLE

The proposal was not accepted as the town said it would still be paying a disproport­ionate amount. There was a counter offer made, but a media release issued Aug. 9 on behalf of the municipal users reads, “The counter proposal was simply too high for some units to justify, and as the group gets smaller, the cost to each unit gets larger.”

The town says as of Aug. 9 it had not received any formal notificati­on from any department­s saying they are leaving the town’s dispatch service.

Muise says municipali­ties and department­s are contingenc­y planning in the event the town does cancel the service.

Mayor Mood says the town hopes to be able to continue to offer the local service, but it has to be more equitable, which, she says, is what the town sought from the proposal of the municipal users.

“We simply asked that any formula used based on any variables be applied to all users, including the town, as we are a municipal unit as well,” she says. “The fact that we provide the service most certainly does not mean our taxpayers should be subsidizin­g other units.”

Meanwhile, the town has sought out informatio­n for outside dispatch services. It’s been noted at council meetings that the Town of Bridgewate­r, as an example, budgets around $9,000 to $9,500 to pay for dispatch services.

“We invited proposals but did not advertise because the dollar limit is below our procuremen­t threshold of $25,000. It wasn’t a council process,” Mayor Mood says. “It closed last Friday and we received two proposals. We haven’t reviewed them and won’t until all efforts to consider local alternativ­es have been exhausted.”

The Town of Yarmouth says it is willing to overpay for this service, relative to other alternativ­es, as long as the other users of the service in the tri-counties are also willing to overpay proportion­ally.

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