Date: Fri 24-Oct-1997
Date: Fri 24-Oct-1997
Publication: Bee
Author: ANDYG
Quick Words:
Fairfield-Hills-fire-mutual
Full Text:
Fire Commissioners Again Reject Mutal Aid Bid From State
BY ANDREW GOROSKO
The Board of Fire Commissioners has turned down a request that the town
re-establish a mutual aid firefighting agreement between itself and the
state-owned Fairfield Hills.
Board chairman Kevin Cragin said Wednesday that after considering the request,
board members chose not to re-enter the agreement under which the town would
help fight fires at Fairfield Hills, when requested, and Fairfield Hills fire
staffers would help the town put out fires, when asked.
Such mutual-aid agreements are common throughout Connecticut among volunteer
and paid fire services.
In May, as the Fairfield Hills Fire Department's membership dwindled, the
board canceled its mutual-aid firefighting agreement with the state to prevent
the town from automatically being dispatched to all fire calls at the
state-owned Fairfield Hills.
The past mutual-aid agreement allowed either the town or the state to
unilaterally terminate the agreement provided that 10 days' notice of
termination is provided in writing.
The Tunxis Management Company, the firm which operates Fairfield Hills for the
state, submitted a letter to the Board of Fire Commissioners seeking to
re-establish the mutual aid agreement, Mr Cragin said. The board unanimously
turned down the request Monday, he said.
Although the past agreement was mutually beneficial to the town and Fairfield
Hills for decades, Fairfield Hills, a former state psychiatric hospital, now
has only a skeleton crew of firefighters, meaning that the town would end up
providing much more mutual aid to Fairfield Hills than Fairfield Hills would
provide to the town, Mr Cragin noted.
In the past, Fairfield Hills had as many as 20 men in its fire department,
while now it has only a handful, he said. In past, the town's mutual-aid
agreement with Fairfield Hills was akin to having access to a sixth volunteer
fire company, he added.
The Board of Fire Commissioners makes decisions that are in the town's best
interests, Mr Cragin said, noting the agency must be careful in its dealings
with the state government.
Re-entering a mutual-aid agreement could cause the town to expend much time,
equipment and money in fighting fires at the 650-acre Fairfield Hills, he
said.
The state presence at Fairfield Hills has decreased in recent years as the
state Department of Mental Health pursued its policy of patient
"deinstitutionalization." Fairfield Hills' psychiatric facilities closed in
December 1995. The state is seeking to either sell or rent its holdings there.
When the town canceled the mutual aid agreement last May, it had been in
preliminary talks with the state on the state request that the town assume
regular firefighting duties at Fairfield Hills. Local firefighters had
cautiously approached that state request, explaining that the future uses of
the sprawling campus are unclear and thus the future firefighting
responsibilities there are unknown.
