Showing posts with label Upper Pottsgrove Fire Company. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Upper Pottsgrove Fire Company. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 21, 2018

Upper Pottsgrove Twp. Feud With Fire Co. Grinds On

The Upper Pottsgrove fire Company and the township's administrative staff occupy the same building at 1409 Farmington Ave.




The increasing friction between the Upper Pottsgrove Board of Commissioners and the Fire Company is taking its toll.

The fire chief has been “expelled,” membership is down by 70 percent and Monday night, the board voted 3-2 to remove Commissioner Martin Schreiber from the fire committee.

Schreiber and Commissioner Elwood Taylor voted no, with Commissioners President Trace Slinkerd, Vice President France Krazalkovich and commissioner Renee Spaide voting yes.

The fire committee, which has members of the fire company and the board of commissioners, acts as a communications link between the two.

Slinkerd made the motion to remove Schreiber with no more warning than, as Taylor described it, “four words on the agenda -- “consider fire committee organization.”

“I have no document in front of me. If there is an issue, I'd like to see it flushed out. I would like to see some data in front of me,” Taylor said.

Taylor said the board had not discussed the matter in advance — as is Slinkerd’s stated preference before voting.

But Krazalkovich and Slinkerd both said the matter was discussed at the May 21 meeting.

The minutes of that meeting indicate that Krazalkovich made a motion, seconded by Spaide, “to draft a letter of no confidence in the current operational leadership of the fire company.”

That motion was ultimately withdrawn, but at the same meeting, Slinkerd said Schreiber “has various roles and (Slinkerd) believes he cannot be objective when it comes to making decisions regarding the fire company,” according to the minutes.

The May 21 meeting was also the meeting at which the commissioners voted unanimously to ask the state to undertake a study of the township’s fire services at no cost to the town.

After Slinkerd made his motion, Schreiber asked him why he was “in a rush” to remove him and did not wait for the fire study. He did not get a public answer.

Later, after the meeting, Slinkerd told The Mercury he did not wait for the fire study to weight in because “that study is about operations and equipment. This is about the board of commissioners.”

According to the “letter of intent” filed with the Pennsylvania Department of Community and Economic Development, which will oversee the study conducted by a consultant, areas examined in the study will include:

• The fire company’s “ability to satisfactorily respond to and extinguish fires as these tasks relate to generally accepted fire-fighting standards.”

• The scope of the assessment will include, “administrative and operational leadership, personnel management, training, facilities and equipment.”

• It will also review “supporting governance documents and organizational structure as well.”

• The study will also assess “future township fire protection needs.”

Monday night, Slinkerd told the audience the board of commissioners gets to appoint two members of the fire committee, one commissioner and one “member of the public at large.”

Until last night, those two members were Krazalkovich and Schreiber.

Township Solicitor Charles D. Garner Jr. said the memorandum of understanding between the township and the fire company sets no terms for the commissioners’ appointments to the fire company and thus, “the power to appoint is also the power to remove.”

Slinkerd said Schreiber’s replacement will be selected at the September meeting.

Asked by firefighter John DeMichael why he wanted Schreiber removed, Slinkerd said Schreiber has a “conflict of interest.”

Asked why he thought that, Slinkerd replied “because I think it is.”

However, after the meeting, he clarified he does not mean anything involving money, as the phrase can often suggest.

Rather, Slinkerd said, the fact that Schreiber is the vice president of the fire company this year, and was president of the fire company last year, and has been a member of the fire company and the fire committee from the first day he came on as a commissioner, creates a conflict for Schreiber as a commissioner in terms of which set of interests he represents.

“He’s wearing so many different hats, I’m not sure his responsibilities as a commissioner are clear,” Slinkerd said.

For his part, Schrieber told The Mercury he believes the issue is about “personalities.”

Schreiber said at the end of the meeting that he was “extremely disappointed with the vote.”

“This is all related to that notorious meeting in January where buying the new fire truck was voted down,” Schreiber told the commissioners.

At that meeting, the commissioners voted 3-2 against spending $300,000 that was in the budget to buy a new truck that would have replaced a 1983 pumper purchased from the North End Fire Company in Pottstown and now so old that replacement parts are nearly impossible to find.

At the time, Slinkerd said he had not been provided with adequate information in advance of the vote.

Outside, after the meeting Thomas Mattingly confirmed that he has been “expelled” as fire chief by the fire company board “because of the letter.” Mattingly said will appeal the expulsion and said T.J. Wojton is now acting chief.

As The Mercury reported last month, “the letter” to which Mattingly refers was one he wrote in May and sent to all commissioners, Pottstown Borough Manager Justin Keller and former Pottstown fire chief Michael Lessar, who has since resigned for unrelated reasons.

In it, Mattingly complained about Lessar, Krazalkovich, state Sen. Robert Mensch, R-24th Dist., and a captain in the West End Fire Company discussing Upper Pottsgrove Fire Company operations, response times and mutual aid, without getting input from Mattingly or other Upper Pottsgrove firefighters.

In the letter, Mattingly called it “disheartening” that Krazalkovich, who is a member of the township’s fire committee, would seek answers regarding incidents he had already asked Upper Pottsgrove’s firefighters about.

“Those questions have been answered and discussed at length,” Mattingly wrote.

As the conflict has dragged on, there are more losses than Mattingly’s position as chief.

Schreiber told The Mercury that at the beginning of the year, the fire company had between 30 to 35 volunteers.

Since the friction has begun and become more public “we’re down to about 10, said Schreiber. “This could have a real impact on fire safety in the township.”

“The lack of support from some of the commissioners is draining our volunteer base and keeping people from wanting to join our company,” DeMichael said.

The Upper Pottsgrove Township Commissioners table. From left, Commissioner Martin Schreiber, Commissioner Elwood Taylor, Board Vice President France Krazalkovich, Solicitor Charles D. Garner Jr., Board President Trace Slinkerd, Township Manager Carol Lewis, Commissioner Renee spaide and Public Works Director Justin Bean.


In other township business last night, a number of residents of Detwiler Road complained about the township's failure to repair the road and that the recent rains had made the situation much worse.

Look for more coverage of that in future issues of The Mercury.

Also, the board voted unanimously to select the Bethlehem company Alloy 5 to undertake a study of all the township's buildings and to make recommendations.

That study will likely not include the township's crumbling salt shed. the commissioners have moved to replace it this year, but paused Monday night when township Manager Carol Lewis told them only one bid had been received and it came in more than $76,000, $21,000 more than the previous bid.

She said the bidder said it was due to the steel in the building costing more because of the tariffs President Donald Trump has imposed on Canadian steel.

The board held off accepting the bid to investigate a less expensive wooden salt shed.

And now, after that marathon post, here are the Tweets from the meeting.

Tuesday, June 19, 2018

Are TWP/Fire Company Disagreements Brewing?

So one of the problems with having five meetings to cover on any particular Monday is that you miss things.

I have not been to the Upper Pottsgrove Township Commissioners in several months, mostly because their agendas look like nothing is going on and others seemed more newsworthy.

But I evidently missed something at the May 21 meeting because for what may be the first time in more than 30 years of community journalism, Monday night's meeting saw a disagreement about adopting the minutes of that meeting.

Commissioners Elwood Taylor, Martin Schreiber and France Krazalkovich went back and forth about how much of any of their comments were included in the draft minutes of the May 21 that were presented last night for approval.

Schreiber and Taylor voted against their approval.

I did not understand everything that was talked about and the commissioners went into executive session immediately after the meeting, so I could not delve further.

What I did determine is that at some point, a vote was taken to have the Pennsylvania Department of Community and Economic Development undertake a study of the township fire company's effectiveness.

What was also evident was that a motion was made to have a "letter of no confidence" in the leadership of the fire company drafted.

What I don't know, other than the decision months ago by the board not to move forward with the purchase of a new fire truck, is what the hell this is all about.

But I will.

And when I do, you will too.

In the meantime, say farewell to Police Officer Steve Sigoda next time you see him. After 30 years with the township, he has announced his retirement.

The board will vote at the July 16 meeting whether to replace him, as Chief Fran Wheatley has requested.

Here are the Tweets from the meeting:

Wednesday, January 17, 2018

UP Fire Truck Purchase Delayed, Tax Break Mulled

Photo by Evan Brandt

THE PASSING OF THE GAVEL: Newly installed Upper Pottsgrove Township Commissioners President Trace Slinkerd, left, presents Elwood Taylor, who served as commissioners president for 12 years, with a person gavel to thank him for his years of service.


Few enterprises stir more passion, or require more dedication, than volunteer fire service.

In Upper Pottsgrove, where the township's administrative offices are in the basement of the firehouse, the relationship between township and fire company officials is better than it once was.

But that doesn't mean everything always goes smoothly.

Case in point: armed with a price that would increase by $7,000 with the coming of the new year, members of the Upper Pottsgrove Fire Company appeared before the township commissioners Tuesday night with the hope of getting approval for the purchase of a $331,000 fire truck.

It would replace a 1983 pumper the fire company purchased from the North End Fire Company whose parts now qualify as nearly impossible to find.

With the payments on the most recently purchased truck running out in December, and money saved to make the down payment, the fire company hoped the board would agree to the purchase of a smaller, more-versatile pumper that could be had without an increase in spending or taxes.

ROAD WARRIORS: Also recognized Tuesday night was
Upper Pottsgrove's  

road crew, Justin Bean, Joe Alessi
and Jeff Imbody.
The fact that the purchase price was included in the budget just made it seem that much more likely.

But they had not counted on the changing of the guard, the fact that two new commissioners had come on board and had no knowledge of the issue, or that they would be asked to vote on spending that much money the same night they were hearing about it for the first time.

Commissioner Elwood Taylor said it was unfortunate timing, given that it had been discussed at length with the previous board, he had seen a demonstration of the truck and believed the purchase to be a good idea.

But Commissioners President Trace Slinkerd and newly elected commissioner Renee Spaide balked and Commissioner France Krazalkovich was lured by the siren song of a federal grant program the fire company has twice failed to obtain.

The township will have to apply for the grant by next month, but must wait until autumn to find out about the grant, which the fire company gives a slim change of success. Since it will take another year from the time the truck is ordered for it to be delivered, it means another two years of sighting fires with a truck from 1983.

Better news for the fire company and its approximately 20 volunteers is the commissioners seeming willingness to enact an earned income tax break for volunteers who meet certain criteria that could be worth as much as $1,000.

Given that only about six of the company's 20 volunteers actively live in Upper Pottsgrove limits the benefit, but the ordinance the commissioners asked solicitor Matthew Hovey to draft would have a reciprocity clause.

For example, fire volunteers who live in Upper Pottsgrove but run with a different fire company, in Pottstown say, would only get the benefit if the municipality where they volunteer also has a similar tax incentive, as authorized under Act 172 of 2016.

It starts to get a little complicated and the commissioners may abandon that clause after further examination, but that's how it stands now.

In the meantime, here are the Tweets from last night's meeting:

Tuesday, April 19, 2016

22 Days That Shook Douglass (Mont.) Township

Photo by Evan Brandt
Some, but not all, of the first responders who were recognized Monday night before the Douglass (Mont.) Supervisors meeting  by State Rep. Marcy Toepel and township officials.


Did you ever have one of those days?

Those weeks?

Those months?

Wouldn't it be nice if someone recognized how hard you had been working and presented you with an official indication of that recognition?

Well Monday night, that's exactly what happened for first responders who faced a heck of a 22-day period during which they dealt with four major fires; three major accidents, including a vehicle hanging on a wire eight feet off the ground;  and two rescues.

It all started on March 6 with a garage fire where live ammunition kept going off while firefighters were trying to battle the blaze and came to a close on April 3 with a fire on a windy day at the Berks-Mont Camping Center.

"Folks don't understand how important it is to have volunteers and how integral to the community you guys are," said Supervisors Chairman Anthony Kuklinski. "Without volunteers, Douglass Township could not exist."

Toepel acknowledged that the citations she was handing out were "really just a piece of paper, but they represent a thank you from the House of Representatives and all the community members."

She added, "the term hero is used far too loosely, but today, you are heroes. The men and women in this room who go out every day to do fire and rescue calls; so behind this piece of paper is the everlasting gratitude to you for what you do every day, risking your life to save other lives and property."

Also thankful was Rick Smith, chief of Gilbertsville Fire & Rescue who gave particular thanks for the cooperation enjoyed among the neighboring departments and services.

"When the chips are down, we know who to call and the job gets done," said Smith.

Without further ado, here are the Tweets from the regular meeting which followed and lasted only 50 minutes.

Tuesday, November 18, 2014

No Upper Pottsgrove Tax Hike for 6th Straight Year

The Upper Pottsgrove Township Commissioners Monday voted 3-1 to advertise a $3.1 million budget that does not raise taxes for what is, by my rough count, the sixth straight year.

Also, the quarterly sewer bill of $215 will not increase in 2015 for those who use the township's sewer system.

There was potential for a tax hike due to requests from the Upper Pottsgrove Fire Company, which included increased costs due to workman's compensation insurance and new radios.

The potential millge increase to meet those costs -- from .375 mills to .61 mills -- would have represented a 62.7 percent increase in the fire tax.

But while that might sound like a lot, it would have worked out to about $30 per house for the median assessment in town of $128,390, said financial adviser Matt Dallas.

Instead, the board decided to use $50,000 in had in reserve to cover those costs, and thus avoid a tax increase.

The new county-required radios will cost about $100,000, but the fire company intends to buy them over-time through a county-sponsored no-interest payment plan, according to Fire Company President Keith Kachel.

As a result, the budget that will be advertised keeps the millage at 3.775 mills for the general fund and fire fund combined.

The $3.1 million sewer budget for 2015 is supported only by those who use it and, as mentioned before, the $215 quarterly bill remains the same as for 2014.

Here are the Tweets from last night's meeting.