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Fire District OKs $20,000 To Study Land Purchase

The study would determine the feasibility of building a fire station on the southwest corner of Post Road and Cedar Avenue.

 


The East Greenwich Fire Commissioners voted to approve spending up to $20,000 to determine the suitability of the state-owned land at Cedar Avenue and Post Road for a new fire station at their regular meeting on Feb. 23.

The action is the first step toward the much more costly endeavor of possibly buying that parcel of land and then building a new station there to take the place of the Main Street fire station.

Fire Chief Peter Henrikson and Commissioner Doug Alexsen presented the reasoning behind building a new station at a special meeting on Feb. 18 at New England Tech. The main reason to move the station is because much of the immediate coverage area for the existing Main Street station is either in Cowesett (which is covered by the Warwick Fire Department) or in Greenwich Cove.

This comes about now, they said, because of the state’s plan to sell the parcel of land on Post Road and Cedar Avenue. The state has put a $360,000 price tag on the property.

Fire District lawyer Scott Spear explained why a pre-bid study of the parcel was important.

“Because the way the bidding process works, if you’re the highest bidder, you take the property as is,” Spear said, explaining that there could be no contingency clause.

“If you put a number on the table and they accept it, you have to buy it,” he said. “So it’s necessary to consider doing all of the due diligence work prior to making an offer on the property.”

The $20,000 would be used to determine the current value of the land; conduct a title search; review the zoning classification; obtain or pay for a survey; conduct an environmental site review; conduct a traffic assessment; and conduct site building assessment.

Commissioner Mark Schwager asked if the Fire Chief had checked with the Police Department to see what information they had on the property, which he said had been considered for a new police station prior to locating the station on First Avenue. Henrikson said he would look into that.

If the survey results are favorable and the Fire District decides to go ahead with bidding on the land, there’s still one more problem: the district has about $300,000 in its impact fee fund, short the $360,000 price set by the state. At the meeting Thursday, commissioners discussed different solutions, including calling a special meeting of the district to get citizens to vote to borrow the extra money.

“We do have impact fee money that will be coming in,” said Commissioner Stephen Bartlett. According to Henrikson, the district can expect as much as $190,000 in coming months from building projects that are taking place now. (Impact fee payments must be paid before the issuance of a certificate of occupancy.) Another $290,000 could come in next year, according to Henrikson.

When Commissioner Mark Gee asked for some sort of ballpark estimate to build a new fire station, Henrikson said he would seek information from fire departments in the state that had recently built new stations.

  • Do you like the corner of Post Road and Cedar Avenue for a new fire station?

    (Voting has been closed for this question)
    • Yes
        42 (32%)
    • No
        88 (67%)
    Total votes: 130
  • Your vote will only count once. This is not a scientific poll. View Results Vote!
Related Topics: Fire District, Fire Station, and New station

Lynn Krim

8:15 am on Tuesday, February 28, 2012

This might be a good idea for down the road but how much more can the taxpayers take on right now? The Town Council recently voted to spend 3.4 million to fix a floor at a school built on a swamp that will, no doubt, be torn down before it's paid off. This is craziness!

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Tucker Henry

8:56 am on Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Two questions need to be answered before this goes any further.

What is the annual operating cost for the Main Street Fire Station and what becomes of this station if this new station project moves forward?

The answers to these questions should be included in the $20,000 study. There's no way that the Fire District, ie the town of East Greenwich, should be anywhere near making an offer on the land until the taxpayers have All the facts and Approve the Total Project - building of the new station and disposal of old one.

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GameMaker

12:23 pm on Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Agreed. Question is: what can be done to derail this project?

Taxed_To_Death

11:31 am on Tuesday, February 28, 2012

What's wrong with the old one? If we need a new one because of NEIT then let them pay the bulk of building it. Hate to say it but I for one am "taxed out" in this town. And I voted for all the other tax items including the school and Police department. I'm done voting yes on anything else thats a "nice to have"

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FriendOfEG

3:32 pm on Tuesday, February 28, 2012

I would not approve another new building until the economy gets an awful lot better than it is. Probably five to ten years away. The land might be worth securing now.

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Joe Kin

10:59 am on Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Funny how the fire district can approve spending up to $20,000 on the study of a new fire station but they cannot pay money owed to their employees, current and retired per the provisions of their contract.

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