Bond issue would bring $7.8 million to build fire station in north part of Springdale

The new Springdale Fire Department Fire Station 7 is visible Thursday, July 11, 2019, on Her-Ber Avenue in Springdale. (NWA Democrat-Gazette/DAVID GOTTSCHALK )
The new Springdale Fire Department Fire Station 7 is visible Thursday, July 11, 2019, on Her-Ber Avenue in Springdale. (NWA Democrat-Gazette/DAVID GOTTSCHALK )


Editor's Note: This is the third in a five-part series on the proposed Springdale bond issue.

SPRINGDALE -- Julie Rogerson and Ann Sugg both appreciate Fire Station No. 7 on Har-Ber Avenue.

The quick response times by Fire Department personnel saved the Rogerson home from fire and 92-year-old Sugg from lying on the floor all night after a fall.

"I called them," Rogerson said of the Fire Department. "I grabbed my dog and my purse, and they were here."

Fire Station No. 7 -- as well as Stations No. 8 and 9 and a training center-- were built with $16.4 million from a 2018 bond issue approved by residents.

The city will bring another bond issue to voters May 9, which includes $7.8 million to build Station No. 10 and additional training structures.

Fire Chief Blake Holte said one station will suffice for now.

"We can't shortchange the city's other infrastructure needs," he said. "We depend on the roads to get us to scenes. They go a long way to making us more efficient."

Holte said the new station would be built somewhere along Wagon Wheel Road, between North 40th Street and South Dixieland Road. Dixieland will be extended south to Wagon Wheel Road as a part of 2018 bond program.

Station No. 10 would serve the north-central reaches of town, where the Fire Department currently has a gap in service, Holte said.

Opening the station would include more than construction costs. Stations No. 7, 8 and 9 were built for about $4 million. The station also would require vehicles. Holte said the department is considering what would be best for the Fire Department's fleet. A new engine would cost about $750,000, he said. A ladder truck would cost about $1.2 million.

Holte said he expects the new station could be in service in about a year and a half if the bond issue is approved.

The entire city benefits when fire personnel are close, said Mayor Doug Sprouse.

The Fire Department in 2017 earned the best fire insurance rating possible from the Insurance Services Office in Jersey City, N.J. Home insurance rates are decreased for homeowners in a city with the top rating, Sprouse noted.

The new station would help the department keep the city's top rating, Sprouse said.

In training

The department also hopes to build some training structures near Fire Station No. 4.

The city's busiest station has outgrown its current building on Elm Springs Road. Its replacement will be built about a block south, just off of White Road. The city will use money from its general fund to build the new Station No. 4, and all equipment will be transferred, Holte said.

The department owns about 5 acres at the site, which will provide room for training structures, Holte said.

The site will not have the capability for live-fire training as it does at the Mickey Jackson Fire Training Center in the city's industrial park, he said.

"But it will still have a place where we can pull ladders and throw hoses," he said.

The location of Station No. 4 will allow a centralized training center for stations on the west side of town. For training at the Mickey Jackson Center, these stations would have to cross town, leaving areas uncovered.

City officials also hope the bond money could expand the training center with features for technical rescue training for situations like a trench, a collapsed building and confined spaces.

In the north

The city also considered building Station No. 10 on land donated for that purpose in the southeastern part of town.

Holte said the department doesn't have coverage issues in the south like it does in the north.

The city moved Station No. 3 north on North Thompson Street, just south of County Line Road, with money from a 2o13 bond issue.

Station No. 7 and Station No. 9 were built from 2018 bond money in the northwestern quadrant of the city -- where city officials expect more residential development. But a map still shows a gap in coverage in the north-central part of the city.

The U.S. 612 bypass and the development of the J.B. Hunt Transport corporate offices are expected to bring additional calls for the Fire Department, Sprouse added. Holte said Lowell's Fire Department has limited staff, and the Springdale or Rogers departments help the smaller city in many situations.

The city does expect to build an 11th station as Springdale continues to grow, Sprouse said.

"And for fire protection, we're not only concerned about how long it takes for one truck to reach a fire scene," Holte said. "But we are concerned about how long it takes multiple trucks to get to a scene."

Fire doubles in size every 30 seconds, Holte said. In three minutes, smoke and heat can ruin everything in the house.

An initial alarm for a house fire puts on call four engine companies, a ladder truck, an ambulance, a battalion chief and 16 firefighters, Holte said. A commercial alarm sends more.

Springdale's Fire Department works to send at least 17 people to extinguish a house fire, Holte said.

In service

Julie and Kirk Rogerson were sitting at home a year ago March 18. Their gas fireplace was on, and they were listening to the Razorback baseball game on the radio, Julie explained.

She said they heard a loud pop, the radio quit and she heard what sounded like a bonfire crackling in their wall.

Julie Rogerson said firefighters said the house was just five or 10 minutes away from a full roof fire.

Firefighters also covered the family's new couch before they started tearing down the wall. Rogerson said they helped minimize the damage.

"We know 100% they saved our home," Rogerson said. "We're big fans."

Sugg lived by herself during the pandemic to protect her from covid-19. Her son and daughter-in-law who had been living with her kept working, and they didn't want to bring the virus home.

"I fell three times," Sugg said. "I called the Fire Department, and they came and helped get me up. They were a great help to me. It's hard to get somebody to help in the middle of the night."

Sugg said she wore an emergency alert button, which she pressed when needing help.

"I was amazed at how quick they got there," Sugg said.

Sugg said she wasn't injured, but would have been lying on the floor until someone came and got her.

"They also come and check my smoke detectors," Sugg said. "I like the Fire Department. They've been good to me."

  photo  A small crowd gathers Thursday, July 2, 2020, inside the main bay during a dedication ceremony for the city's Fire Station No. 8 on Huntsville Road in Springdale. The station is patterned after three other fire stations in the city with another planned for the future. Visit nwaonline.com/200703Daily/ for today's photo gallery. (NWA Democrat-Gazette/Andy Shupe)
 
 
  photo  Engine 9 is parked outside Thursday, July 8, 2021, of the new Springdale Fire Department Fire Station 9 during opening ceremonies. The station, located 7561 W. Downum Road, was made possible by the passing of the 2018 Bond. Check out nwaonline.com/210709Daily/ and nwadg.com/photos for a photo gallery.(NWA Democrat-Gazette/David Gottschalk)

Special election

Springdale residents will vote on a $360 million bond issue May 9. The ballot contains six questions.

Estimated costs and projects are:

$135 million for street improvement

$16.3 million for park improvement

$16.3 million for a new Senior Center

$7.8 million for a new fire station and other improvements

$142 million to refinance debt on the 2018 bonds

$44 million to refinance the 2020 bonds

Source: Springdale

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