Lafayette fire dept. pushing for tax hike
Department promises improved services
By Amy Bounds (Contact)
Saturday, September 27, 2008
LAFAYETTE — Local firefighters are canvassing the city, hoping to convince residents to approve an emergency services tax hike to pay for additional full-time firefighters and paramedics.
If the question, Ballot Issue 2A, is approved, the property tax mill levy would increase by up to 4.5 mills to generate about $1.5 million in 2009. The increase would cost the owner of a $350,000 home about $125 a year.
Lafayette now has no dedicated funding source for emergency services.
City Administrator GaryKlaphake said the city can only afford minimum fire department staffing. The city is transitioning from a staff of volunteer firefighters to one of professional firefighters.
In 2005, Lafayette hired two full-time firefighters and one full-time training officer. Prior to that, the fire chief was the only member of the department on the payroll. In 2006, the city received grant money from the U.S. Department of Homeland Security to add nine full-timers over four years.
If the tax increase passes, Klaphake said, the money would cover eight additional full-time firefighters and paramedics, with three on duty around the clock at the fire station. The station is one of busiest in Boulder County, with close to 2,000 calls a year, officials said.
Now there’s typically one or two paid firefighters on duty per shift, with gaps filled by volunteers. City officials said volunteers will still be needed to help with structure fires and other major emergencies.
Navarro said approval of the tax also would allow the department to expand its volunteer ranks, from 60 to 80. Though volunteers are unpaid, he said, the department foots the bill for equipment and training.
Lafayette also took over ambulance services from a private contractor in 2007, with the goal of reducing response times. But the user fees don’t cover the costs, requiring the city to spend about $250,000 from its general fund budget for the service.
The proposed tax increase would cover that gap and provide money to replace aging ambulances. The city’s two ambulances are 12 years and 6 years old. Navarro said ambulances need to be replaced after five years.
Opponents have called the measure a “taxpayer bailout,” saying the city should live within its means and should have planned better.
The city’s other ballot measure, Ballot Issue 2B, calls for creation of a 2 percent lodging tax, would generate $75,000 to $100,000 a year for the city’s general fund, based on construction of a hotel north of Exempla Good Samaritan Medical Center in the SoLa development.
Work on the 82-acre-development’s infrastructure is expected to start later this year. Along with a hotel, the plans include apartments, retail, restaurants, commercial buildings and a senior living facility.
Contact Camera Staff Writer Amy Bounds at 303-473-1341 or
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