The township board recently granted the Lyon Township (MI) Fire Department’s requests for a facilities study for a potential new station, an assessment center to hire new full-time staff, and approval to buy the township’s first ladder truck, reports hometownlife.com.
The department’s current Engine 2 is a 10-year-old pumper that requires expensive repairs. Officials worked with Sutphen on an apparatus and decided on the $1.3 million, 100-foot ladder, which could be available in July, according to the report.
The township has hired six full-time firefighters and two full-time captains since 2019, but four of the six firefighters and one captain have left to join other departments, the report says. Fire officials are close to ratifying a contract with the union representing full-time firefighters after months of negotiations.
To expedite the hiring process, the board approved assessment centers to test qualifications for selected candidates, at a cost of $8,825 to find a captain from five candidates and $4,300 to test up to nine firefighter candidates, ultimately hiring four, according to the report.
It also approved a facilities study—to be conducted by Redstone Architects at a max cost of $25,000—to evaluate up to seven possible locations for a new station or public safety complex. Renovations to the current facility are also on the table, but a new location in the south would improve response times.