Public meeting on firehouse proposal Friday night


KENT — As the Board of Finance wrestled with the budget during their five-hour meeting Tuesday night, the upcoming hearing and vote on the firehouse proposal was never far from the discussion.

The board ageed on an approach for tomorrow night’s hearing on the firehouse proposal, as stated by Chairman George Jacobsen:

• The firehouse will cost taxpayers about one half of one mill each year for 12 years.

• Initially the project will have to be financed with a short-term loan of 12 to 18 months’ duration.

• The town will have to bond for a figure in the $2.5-million range.

And, said Jacobsen, voters "should be aware that the Board of Finance has determined that the aggregate budget is too big and has asked the Board of Selectmen and the Board of Finance to reduce the capital plan."

If the town passed the budget and capital plan as presented, and gave the thumbs-up to the firehouse, Jacobsen’s projection for the mill rate is 19.53 — an increase of 11 percent. (See accompanying story on this page.)

Paul Abbott, a member of previous firehouse committees as well as the finance board, said he feared that news of a double-digit tax increase would not only cause the budget to fail, but would "doom" the firehouse.

The Firehouse Building Committee has tentatively narrowed the field of bidders for the project from five to two, but is waiting for approval from the state Department of Public Safety before formally rejecting the lowest bid. Committee members determined the low bid, from Hawley Construction at $2.4 million, does not meet the requirements spelled out in the Request for Proposal package.

The two bidders remaining are United Construction and Borghesi Building. The latter assisted the previous firehouse committee in researching the prefabricated construction option that the committee ultimately approved.

Because the bidder has not been chosen, the committee will not have plans or drawings to show the public at Friday (April 20) night’s 8 p.m. hearing at Town Hall. They will have an informational handout and a presentation, and members of the Board of Finance will be on hand to explain the broader points of the financing.


— Patrick L. Sullivan

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