CENTRAL CITY — The Central City Volunteer Fire Company says it will stop providing service to its section of Shade Township on Thursday unless a contract is reached with the township.
Ironically, 65 percent of its firefighters reside in the township.
The township is drawing up a contingency plan to make sure residents are protected.
The fire company has scheduled a classified advertisement for today’s edition of The Tribune-Democrat informing residents of its decision.
The letter states that for the past three years, the fire company has tried to come to terms with the township and has asked the township to consider implementing a millage rate to be divided between the three fire companies that serve the township.
The other two fire companies are Hooversville and Stoystown.
The letter says the best offer from the township was a donation of $15,000. It says firefighters had reduced their request from $50,000 to $26,800.
John Topka, chairman of the township supervisors, said the township was notified about a week ago of the fire company’s decision.
The fire company wants a three-year contract with an increase each year, he said.
The township sent the fire company a contract at the end of December that includes $15,000 plus 60 percent of its foreign fire tax, which amounts to about $9,700. The township also pays $4,800 for its share of workers’ compensation for the firefighters, Topka said.
The township has given the fire company $354,000 since 1994 for its services.
“We have been quite generous to them over the years,” he said.
Hooversville and Stoystown have been asked to cover areas now served by Central City. Windber firefighters also may be asked to help.
Because the fire company has $111,000 in its savings accounts, Topka said he is reluctant to place a tax on residents for the additional money the fire company says it needs.
The township has asked for the fire company’s financial records to see how money is being spent.
A fire department spokesman said the $111,000 will be used to pay bills and is being saved for capital purchases that will be needed in the future.
The fire company has provided two years of financial records to the township, he said.
In 2006, the fire company had a deficit of $23,000. In 2007, there was a $20,000 surplus thanks to a federal grant that aided the company’s purchase of equipment.
Topka said the township is one of the most generous municipalities in the area when it comes to fire companies.
The increase the fire company wants means the township would be paying three times more than Central City does, he said.
The fire company spokesman said the reason for that is because 90 percent of its calls are in the township.
Topka said that’s a moot point because the fire company still has a surplus.
Local News
Firefighters push contract deadline
- Local News
-
-
Female jail guards to stand trial in alleged inmate trysts
Two suspended female Indiana County jail guards have been ordered to stand trial in connection with alleged sexual assaults involving three female inmates.
-
Highlights of Gov. Corbett's state spending plan
Read on to see a bulleted list of Gov. Tom Corbett’s $27.1 billion state spending plan for the year that starts July 1.
-
Pa. gas drilling fee bill debate ends without vote
Pennsylvania, the only major gas-producing state that does not tax the taking of natural gas from its soil, moved closer Tuesday to imposing a fee on the drilling in the vast Marcellus Shale reserves that have transformed the state in recent years.
-
Blogging with heart
I was feeling overwhelmed yesterday, so today, I’m organizing my work. I have talked to probably a couple dozen people for Heart Month stories and I have pages and pages of notes.
-
$27.1B budget proposed
Gov. Tom Corbett on Tuesday proposed a budget of $27.1 billion, with no tax increases, deep cuts to higher education assistance and a range of cost-cutting in services for the poor, elderly and disabled.
-
Universities face steep cuts
State universities still trying to recover from deep cuts last year would have their public funding slashed even further under a budget plan unveiled Tuesday, leading some institutions to warn of a choice between maintaining buildings and offering academic programs students need to graduate.
-
Plan hurts middle class, local Democrats contend
While members of his own party praised Gov. Tom Corbett’s fiscal restraint, some local Democratic lawmakers said the Republican’s proposed budget panders to corporate interests while inflicting pain on the middle class.
-
Detour hurting some Portage businesses
Craig Mazzarese’s business depends heavily on drive-by customers, but since last week fewer drive-bys have been stopping
-
Local airport funding intact
Airport leaders here are breathing sighs of relief after Congress approved funding to support local commercial air service through 2015.
-
With state revenue tight, Westmont seeks school budget input
The Westmont Hilltop school board on Tuesday night held a public forum at the middle school to explain why the district, already one of the most efficient in the state, must raise taxes each year.
- More Local News Headlines
-
Female jail guards to stand trial in alleged inmate trysts






