New Smyrna Fire Station No. 5 Contract Awarded
The Smyrna city council honored four outgoing members at Monday's final meeting for 2011.
Monday night’s city council meeting was the last of 2011 and the last meeting for four Smyrna city council members.
Backs were patted throughout the meeting by both incumbent and outgoing council members as Mayor Max Bacon read a proclamation honoring council members Pete Wood, Ward 7, and Ron Newcomb, Ward 2, for their years of service to Smyrna. Wood was also awarded a certificate and pin for his 20 years of service to the city.
Jimmy Smith, Ward 5 council member, got emotional when he recalled his career on Smyrna city council while outgoing Ward 4 council member McNabb thanked his constituents for electing him to two terms of office. McNabb also urged the incoming council members not to increase the millage rate calling it a “failure of leadership” if such was done.
The outgoing members were honored earlier in the evening at a reception at Taylor Brawner Hall.
But Monday’s meeting was not without strife. Wade Lnenicka, Ward 6 city council member, cast the evening’s only dissenting vote concerning improvements at East West Connector and Gaylor Street, an intersection that lies in unincorporated Cobb County.
The motion was approved 6-1. Lnenickca expressed concern because, in his opinion, Cobb County did not give city staff adequate time or information needed to evaluate the financial requirements necessary for the installation of a traffic signal and operational improvements at the intersection. He also asked why Smyrna was being asked to contribute to a traffic signal that didn’t lie inside the city limits.
“Why are we paying city taxes for traffic lights the county routinely builds and operates everyday in unincorporated Cobb County?” Lnenicka said. “That’s a dangerous precedent to set.”
The motion ultimately passed because of the other council members’ concerns for safety at the intersection. Smyrna-Vinings Patch will have more details about this motion Tuesday.
Also at Monday’s meeting, council members voted 7-0 to award Catamount Constructors Inc. a construction manager at-risk contract for Smyrna’s new Fire Station No. 5. The Roswell-based company placed the lowest bid, $1,477,000, of the four companies competing for the contract.
Alex Backry, a regular contributor during citizen input who unsuccessfully ran for mayor last month, referenced an article in The Marietta Daily Journal when he expressed concerns about Fire Station No. 5 including its proximity to existing fire stations.
“The (federal grant) is to approve the first two years of expenses to the cost of building and hiring, I assume, six people to cover that,” he said. “After the first two years the city government will be covering, Mayor, as you said in the article I’m referring to the article solely, $300,000 a year to operate, which probably will go up to $500,000.”
A federal stimulus grant will cover a majority of the $1.4 million cost, although the city will contribute $354,433 for the construction of the station. A $600,000 grant from FEMA will pay for the fighfighters salaries for the first two years and after the city will be on the hook. The city’s fire budget for fiscal 2012 is $4.7 million and the new station, which will be built at the corner of Cooper Lake Road and the East-West Connector, will cost an additional $40,000. When the FEMA grant concludes, the fire budget will "increase by about $300,000 per year'' according to the MDJ article.
In other news from the meeting, the council voted to table till January 17 a public hearing for a proposed text amendment to Sections 402, 712 and 906 of the City's Zoning Ordinance to permit the outdoor retail sale of large outdoor products in the General Commercial zoning district.
J. B. Smith
10:11 am on Tuesday, December 20, 2011
Does anyone know WHICH corner of the E/W Connector and Cooper Lake? Just curious....
Hunt Archbold
1:45 pm on Tuesday, December 20, 2011
Fire Station No. 5 will be near the southern corner of the EW Connector on Cooper Lake. If you were traveling on the EW Connector, towards Austell Road., you would turn left on to Cooper Lake.
J. B. Smith
9:36 pm on Tuesday, December 20, 2011
across from that medical building? Will they have to widen Cooper Lake on that side?
Not a Fool
2:58 pm on Thursday, December 22, 2011
Just read the MDJ article.... unbelievable.
All the new equipment needed for the new station is a few radios? Who believes that? Are you going to send firemen to a fire in blue jeans, a tee shirt and a radio? Smyrna spokeswoman Jennifer Bennett must be listening to Smyrna Fire Chief Jason Lanyon's rhetoric.
As for moving two trucks to the new station, they will most likely have to be towed there because the Chief keeps two inoperable trucks parked at stations just for looks.
Chief Lanyon applied for both grants with false information and behind the backs of the Mayor and Council. Don't believe it, look at the grant applications. They contradict each other and contain untrue statements.
It is time for Smyrna to find a new Chief that can be trusted.
Paul Smyrna
4:04 pm on Thursday, December 22, 2011
I'm not sure where "Not a Fool" gets his information, but there aren't any inoperable trucks parked at the stations. Station 1 has an old rescue truck that has equipment on it and runs calls from time to time. Station 2 has the reserve 1980s ladder truck, that is mostly parked. It does have some issues because of it's age, but does run and does pump water. Station 3 has the reserve 1980s engine that fills in at least once a month while front line engines are being worked on. Station 3 also houses an antique (1940s or 1950s) engine that runs. I don't think anyone thinks that antique is there anything but for looks.
As far as the grants, I can't speak to that, but it sounds like if he did it, he was trying to better the City.
Inside-Out
7:46 pm on Thursday, December 22, 2011
You cannot deny that the residents on that side of town need a neighborhood Fire Station and deserve one. People don't think a few minutes matter until they are the ones waiting on a fire truck or a paramedic. On a personal note Chief Lanyon does an outstanding job and has given the City of Smyrna one of the lowest insurance ratings in the State. That saves every resident money. Hold your breath and count and then tell us how many minutes away you want a Fireman. Thanks to the great work of Chief Lanyon and His top notch staff its not very long and now its getting even better for the residents in this area. Money well spent.
Meg
9:50 pm on Thursday, December 22, 2011
Backry mentions proximity to other stations. Assuming he means station 4 on S.Cobb I'm guessing he doesn't have concern for (and thankfully didn't win the votes of) the citizens of Vinings Estates and surrounding areas developed after the last station was built 20 years ago. Thank you Chiefs Lanyon and Acree for bringing us a new station.