Council votes to bring back fire engine

A new fire station at Mitchell Park will have public restrooms, firefighter living quarters, a captain’s office and two drive-through bays for ambulances and fire trucks. Photo from BRW Architects.

BY BRADEN CARTWRIGHT
Daily Post Staff Writer

Palo Alto City Council has voted to bring back a fire engine to the station at Mitchell Park, where neighbors are afraid slow response times will lead to disaster.

“The LA fires are a reminder that every second really counts,” Councilman Greer Stone said on Monday before a 7-0 vote.

Council added a fire captain position and asked City Manager Ed Shikada to present options in May for adding three positions, to allow the station to have both an engine and an ambulance at the corner of East Meadow Drive and Middlefield Road.

In the meantime, the single position will allow a crew of three firefighters to take out an engine or ambulance, but not at the same time. 

The single position will be filled with overtime by existing firefighters, and not a new hire, Shikada said. 

The station is getting rebuilt and will open in early 2027, and the goal is to have both an engine and an ambulance by then, Chief Geo Blackshire said.

Firefighters said manning an ambulance and fire engine at the same time isn’t ideal. They want the city to add full-time positions and not mandate overtime. 

“We are not even talking about adding exotic resources,” said Joe Penko, president of the firefighter’s union. “The inaction that we’re taking on a regular basis is incredible to me. Do the right thing.”

The city has six full-time fire stations, with a total of five engines, one ladder truck and three roving ambulances, Blackshire said.

Fire Station 4 has been without an engine since July 2020 due to pandemic-era budget cuts.

More and more residents have learned about the absence in recent weeks, and a petition to bring back the engine gathered 542 signatures.

Around 100 residents attended a community meeting at the Mitchell Park Community Center on Feb. 13.

Blackshire reassured residents that his department is taking a systemic, data-driven approach, but the loudest applause of the night was for a retired firefighter who implored the city to put an engine at every station.

Engines are usually the first to respond to any kind of call, and ambulances are taken out of service if they’re transporting a patient to the hospital, Blackshire said.

An ambulance at Fire Station 4 is used 20% of the time, which means a fire engine would be available around 80% of the time, Blackshire said.

Council can make more changes during budget discussions in May and June. But Shikada warned that the city is projecting a deficit.

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