Elmwood Park is joining other nearby west suburban communities, applying for a federal grant that would boost area's fire communication capabilities. Village board members voted unanimously Monday night in support of a regional grant application to the Federal Emergency Management Agency, which administers the program.
The village of Oak Park is to serve as the host agency and submit the application on behalf of Oak Park, Elmwood Park, Forest Park, River Forest and the West Suburban Consolidated Dispatch Center, said Elmwood Park village manager Paul Volpe.
If successful, the grant will provide funding for new communication equipment between the West Suburban Dispatch Center and each of the village's fire stations, the manager said in his report. Each of the communities would pay a 15 percent matching grant, with rest footed by the agency.
In Elmwood Park's case, the village will be paying $18,314, with the agency doling out $103,779, according to the memorandum of understanding arrived at by the communities and West Suburban Consolidated Dispatch Center.
The proposal represents "a good opportunity to get a system we would never be able to afford," Volpe said Tuesday.
The federal and village matching grants for the other participating agencies are $187,427 and $33,075 for Oak Park; $49,850 and $8,797 for the village of Forest Park; $41,465 and $7,317 for the village of River Forest; and $37,012 and $6,531 for the West Suburban Consolidated Dispatch Center.
The West Suburban Consolidated Dispatch Center acts as the 911 center for the villages involved, dispatching fire and emergency crews. In addition, WSCDC is the primary dispatch call for MABAS (Mutual Box Alarm System) Division II, the agency says on its website.