I may not be perfect, but at least I'm not fake.

I may not be perfect, but at least I'm not fake.
This page is copyrighted by Deborah Dorey Wilson, The Lebanon Truth Seekers. All rights reserved.

Wednesday, January 27, 2016

An Interview with Lebanon Fire Department, Inc.... Some Honest Answers Aren't So Easy........


LMTS  has talked a lot about the Lebanon Fire and EMS department over the past year.  In fact, it was in learning the struggles and accomplishments of the Fire and Rescue Departments and then following their growth, achievement and success that LMTS found our backbone and started searching for the truth. We have remained as informative to the accomplishments and achievements of our Lebanon Fiire and Recue Departments  and the successful combination of the two,  for our entire 9 months of operation.

After the January 20th Lebanon Budget Committee Meeting questions regarding the Fire Department Incorporation, it’s become pretty obvious that there is a misunderstanding of this group throughout the town, and that they are frequently used in name, to divert responsibilities off of the town’s Boards and Committees onto an “unknown” or “ghost” organization.

The truth of the “Fire Department Incorporated” is that they are actually anything BUT a “ghost” organization and the group is actually comprised of some pretty responsible people who live and work and protect the residents of Lebanon, Maine.

Chairman of the “Incorporation”, Joe Perron, reached out to LMTS on Tuesday evening,  January 26th, to speak to me regarding the shape of today’s “Incorporation” membership, their goals and dreams of the future for their group, and in their role of support for the newly combined Lebanon Fire and EMS Department.  I met with Joe, and Incorporation Treasurer, Jessica Kelley, at Station 1 on Depot Road and sat down to ask, and get answers to, some pretty important questions.

First you must know about the group that they are completely separate from the Town of Lebanon, although they all work for the town’s Fire and EMS Department, and that is, in fact, required as part of membership in the non-profit group, they are not under the control of the Board of Selectmen or even under the Chief. They are a complete and separate non-profit organization.  If you leave the Fire and EMS Department employment, you are no longer eligible for a voting share in the incorporation. From what I understand, you can still remain as an observer or aid of the group, however, you can no longer be included as an officer, and you have no vote on the incorporation’s decisions.

The East Lebanon Fire Department, Inc. began its distinction as a corporation with the mission of raising funds to support the East Lebanon Fire Department in 1955. During this time, the Fire Department was strictly a volunteer fire company, and the members wanted a way to raise funds for necessary equipment and support that was not under the town government budget control, but a way for residents to participate and support the purchase of various things needed by the Fire Department.  According to Perron, a donation of land was secured, financial donations, and many suppers and events were held by the Incorporation Members, (who at the time were all male) and their subsidiary, the Ladies’ Auxiliary, in order to raise the money to build the Fire Station (now called Station 1) on the property located on the corner of Depot Road and Upper Cross Road. The site had originally housed an old school house, along with a 2 bay garage, which had been used to house the town’s fire apparatus prior to the time the new fire house was built. The new fire station was erected by the Incorporation in the late 70s, and the Lebanon Fire Department took over residence of the building.

Soon after the building of the Depot Road Station, during the early 1980s, the Town of Lebanon voters appropriated funding for a second and smaller fire station on Route 202 near the corner of Hubbard Road, in a small area of town known as Blaisdell Corner. A second Fire Department began housing their apparatus in that building, allowing them to respond more quickly and efficiently to emergencies on the NH border end of town. Two Departments, one town.

As laws and needs changed, and the Town of Lebanon grew and changed, the Blaisdell Corner Station (aka Station 2) was used to house the Lebanon Rescue Department, a group of EMTs and Paramedics, and the town’s ambulance. The Blaisdell Corner station remains completely in Town of Lebanon ownership.

The Fire Department on Depot Road has seen many fundraisers and celebrations. The Ladies’ Auxiliary would hold ham and bean suppers, a staple fundraiser for many churches and fire departments of the time, and Perron says when he started with the Department, the meeting room and equipment bays would easily be filled with residents and visitors from the extended community, all visiting, eating, enjoying one another's company, and supporting the fundraising efforts of the ladies, or of the incorporation members. However, as volunteerism and the economy have eroded over time, not only in Lebanon, or in Maine, but across the country, fewer and fewer people would attend the fundraisers and they became further and further apart. The group still sponsors their annual yard sale and golf tournament, and 2 years ago participated in the fundraising efforts for another town department by sponsoring a softball tournament. Perron says the softball tournament may make a comeback in 2016 as it was an event they all enjoyed and public  participation was high.

But, in answer to Budget Committee questions, and the resulting questions of local residents, the East Lebanon Fire Department, Inc. is alive and well and after the struggles of membership turnover and public scrutiny, they are hoping to come back stronger than ever in 2016.

Perron serves as Incorporation Chairman, with Jt. Harmon as their President, TJ Gagnon as Vice President, Jessica Kelley as Treasurer, Cindy Harmon as Secretary, and Tyler Thurber as  the “At Large” member of the officer’s group. What exactly is “At Large”? Well Thurber is charged to stand in and act on behalf of any one officer, in the event of that officer’s absence during Incorporation meetings. In addition, the incorporation enjoys the support and membership of 7 other firefighters, and are moving to change the incorporation charter to allow the members of the EMS side of the newly formed (June 2015)combined department.

The pair of officers also took the time to mention the hiring of Chief Meehan to lead the combined Lebanon Fire and EMS Department, stating that his work and dedication had created a combined department where there had once been two hopelessly separated departments only a year ago, making friends and family and side by side cross trained workers from two separate department’s members.  The cross training also makes it easier for EMS service responders to join the Fire Department Inc. as they become trained in fire fighting and added to the Department in that additional role.

Perron, Kelley and I had a long discussion of the financial position of the Incorporation, and the truth is that they’re working on it. The departing members of the Incorporation have not easily relinquished control over such things as legal documents, bank accounts, or checkbooks, but Perron is on top of that, actively working with the group’s bank and attorney to regain that control for the group.  This is a fairly young membership, but speaking with Perron and Kelley, it’s clear that the reins of the incorporation are in capable and responsible hands. 

The Budget Committee questioned the ownership of Station 1 and how the process was moving along on the desires of the Incorporation to turn the building over to the town. According to Perron and Kelley, that transfer of ownership is still in the works, but it has been very hard to backpedal and secure paperwork  and records from the previous incorporation officers.  Here are the problems the group is facing, and why the transfer has not been as easy as residents might think it should be:

The land on the corner of Depot Road and Upper Cross Road was donated for the use of the East Lebanon Fire Department, Inc. to build the Fire Station by a local couple. The deed, is in the name of the East Lebanon Fire Department, Inc.  However, the deed includes a “revisionary clause” which states that if, at any time, the East Lebanon Fire Department, Inc. becomes insolvent or intends to sell or transfer ownership of the building, the LAND reverts back to the ownership of the original donator, or their heirs. If the incorporation deeds the building to the Town of Lebanon, the heirs of the original donator would then regain ownership of the land that the station is built on. The heirs of the original family do not reside in Lebanon, or even within the State of Maine.  The Town of Lebanon does not want to accept the donation of the building into town ownership without also owning the land it sits on. This decision seems harsh, but business and legal-wise, it is truly in the best interest of the town.

 Discussions were begun with the heir of the property by the former officers of the corporation, and the family has been very generous in their agreements to turn over the property to the Town of Lebanon.  Meetings were held with the Selectmen and all seemed to be in order for an easy transfer of the deed.  A wrench was placed in the operations when the former officers left the Fire Department, the reasons of which I am not going to dispute on anyone’s behalf, and as such, forfeited their membership in the corporation.  All of this created a time delay in finishing the transaction, and leaving the incorporation with the legalities of regrouping, electing  new officers, and turning over responsibilities prior to their ability to continue discussions with the land owners’ heirs.

So where does the problem lie today? The incorporation is willing to give the building, and the heir to the landowner willing to donate the land, and it all seems like the perfect combination for a quick and easy transfer. Not so easy. There are deeds to be signed, transfers in probate to revert the land to the original  land owner’s estate and then on to the new heirs, clearing of the title to the land, and oh the lawyers!! Incorporation lawyers, lawyers for the heir, and the town’s lawyers. Who is going to pay all the lawyers? Court charges for all these transfers aren’t cheap either.  But the good news is that they are being worked on.

The Selectman’s assertion that this was all being handled by firefighter Jessica Kelley drew quite a reaction from the Budget Committee, but in fact, Jessica is only part of the equation. As the Treasurer of the Incorporation, Jessica needs to secure the vote of the incorporation membership to expend money,  and  then sign the check. That would be easier if she could secure the checkbook and banking account transfers from the former incorporation Treasurer without the need to involve incorporation lawyers to obtain it.  The thought that maybe this young lady was solely responsible for working with lawyers, transferring deeds and writing checks, drew lots of comments, but the truth is that this 21 year old young woman is responsible enough to enter a home engulfed in flames, find a resident, and bring them out to safety. This sobering smack of reality makes the thought of her being responsible for simple legal paperwork, not such a laughable matter.

In the meanwhile, discussions at the Budget Committee Meeting on Wednesday the 20th have brought forth a new obstacle.  The Code Enforcement Officer made a visit to the station on Tuesday afternoon,  January 24th,  and there is a real concern that the back meeting room may actually be in danger of being condemned if work is not done to that meeting room soon. The Depot Road Fire Station is not in the best of shape structurally. The floor in the back meeting room has sunk to about an 8 inch difference from  outside edge to center and along one wall there is a full 2 inch gap between wall and floor. The hot water heater is leaking and there have been some pretty bad problems with rodents.  While the town debates moving forward toward a full time Fire and EMS Department, the building, through a lack of fundraising dollars, has slipped into disrepair. Chief Meehan and the Board of Selectmen have recently made repairs from the Fire and EMS budget to the overhead doors, and have repaired the furnace, but the Selectmen aren’t really keen on spending  a lot of money on repairs to a building that does not belong to the Town of Lebanon.  Again, this decision is not one that is not understandable, it’s just good business sense when being accountable with taxpayer dollars.

There are problems with the apparatus as well. The Forestry truck leaks in more places than there are Fire and EMS members’ fingers to plug them, and Engine 1 is also out of service for some pretty serious mechanical issues. During the Budget Committee meeting, former Fire Department members expressed concerns over dollar amounts being expended on repairs to the vehicles, wondering why the current department members didn’t do some of the maintenance themselves, “like we always did in Lebanon”. But the truth of the matter is that these engines are OLD. Some of them so old that their legality in carrying firefighters is in question due to safety changes and requirements in fire vehicles. LMTS was very concerned at a recent Selectmen’s Meeting when current trade-in values were discussed with regards to some of our equipment. There are some of our vehicles that are almost more money in scrap value than they are in trade-in value.  Discussion continues in other Committee meetings about the “millions of dollars” in equipment housed in Station 1, and truth is that we are lucky if that equipment is worth a few hundred thousand dollars.

Equipment and buildings do not appreciate in value, they depreciate. Buildings do not maintain  themselves. Without proper attention to maintenance and repair, buildings become dangerous and safety hazards. Those are simple truths.

At the end of the conversation with our East Lebanon Fire Incorporation Officers, we discussed what the officers would wish for if I handed them a magic lamp and a genie appeared offering them 3 wishes.

 I was surprised that answer number 1 was not for a brand new fire station.  Joe answered that he could live with the Station the way it was but that he was worried about the apparatus.  “I would wish for new trucks and equipment,” he stated, worrying aloud that people’s lives were depending on town owned equipment that is in some serious need of repair and upgrade.

Wish number 2 was for a new fire house, or at least for an addition that included a shower and gear cleaning capabilities. At this time, after each incident, the gear has to be brought to Sanford for cleaning, but according to Perron,  there are carcinogens and chemicals that go home on his clothing and skin associated with being inside a burning building. “We’re not only exposing ourselves, we’re exposing our spouses and children to this stuff.”

The third wish was for all the corporation members and Fire and EMS responders. “I would buy everyone a second set of gear,” Perron stated. His concern were if a member participated in a fire incident and their gear were in Sanford being cleaned and a second call came in, the responders would be without gear, and therefore, effectively out of service for the second incident. With the Mutual Aid community watching for Lebanon responses to remain at top levels, the worry over having a proper second set of turnout gear is weighing heavy on all the responders’ shoulders.

With the decline of attendance at Board and Committee meetings in town comes a blissful state that my mother likes to term as “Living in a cloud castle”. We have become increasingly unaware that having a top notch town government and through them, departments, depends on each of us. All of us as a community group, and each of us as individuals, identifying need and then determining what we personally can do to make things better. It’s easy to hear the truth spelled out in an article and make statements that “Somebody should do Something”.  It’s understandable that it’s  much harder after a hard day of work and errands to actually move ourselves back out of the house, into the car, and into a meeting room to pay a bit of attention to the care and maintenance of equipment and buildings that are unimportant in our own small little world, until the day comes when we, or our children, or our neighbors have to make that 911 call and wait for people to respond and do their best to save us, our family, our pets or our homes. On that one fateful day, the need for well maintained apparatus, well trained professionals,  with the best possible equipment becomes all too real.

If you had the choice between heading out to a soccer game, snuggling on the couch and watching a movie, or heading to the local Fire Station for a meal of ham and beans, where would you choose to be? My suggestion to my friends, neighbors and community residents is to take a moment to think hard on that answer. Talk to your spouse about their thoughts. Talk to your children. And then head to a Board or Committee meeting and ask questions. As a matter of fact, ask questions over and over and over again until the elected officials of your town, who are paid to provide these answers to you, give you some hard, but honest answers.

The East Lebanon Fire Department, Inc. is alive and well and doing their best to come up with the answers the public is looking for but they can’t do it alone or without the help of their Town and its residents. Stop in at the Depot Road Station 1 and ask questions. Head on over to the Budget Committee meetings on Wednesday nights at the Town Office and ask questions.  Stop in at the Board of Selectmen’s meetings on Monday evenings and ask questions. Keep asking. Keep searching for the truth. 

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