Firehouse details at Aug. 2 meeting

FALLS VILLAGE — There will be a town meeting next month to deal with bonding for the new Emergency Services Center, and the meeting will adjourn to a referendum vote.That was the major item to come out of the Board of Selectmen’s regular monthly meeting Monday, July 11.An information meeting is scheduled for Aug. 2. The town meeting date has not been determined.After 15 years of planning and land acqusition, fundraising and applying for grants, and some construction, the new firehouse project is short of almost three-quarters of its projected cost — to the tune of about $2.5 million.Over the winter, at a couple of public information meetings, the project was explained and financing options discussed.The first phase of site work at 188 Route 7 South is complete. That includes septic, a driveway and the hole for the cellar.Architectural, mechanical and civil engineering plans are ready, as is a bid-ready project specifications book.The existing firehouse is downtown, next door to the Falls Village Inn. It is on two floors, and at 3,528 square feet, it is far too small for the needs of a modern fire department. At 7,380 square feet, the new facility will more than double the space the department currently has.Having everything on one floor will also make it a far more practical venue for an emergency shelter.There will be space for 10 vehicles in seven bays with entry from two sides. While the Falls Village department has no ladder truck, the gabled ends of the new firehouse will be high enough to accommodate the ladder from the Canaan Fire Company when it comes to Falls Village on standby.Plans also call for a kitchen and two offices, along with meeting, storage and mechanical rooms.There will be special meetings of the selectmen and finance boards in the next couple of weeks to iron out the details of the town meeting.Other business• The selectmen denied a request from George Wright of Amesville for permission to buy a sticker and use the Falls Village transfer station. First Selectman Pat Mechare said that transfer station customers must, by ordinance, be residents of the town. Amesville, just over the Iron Bridge from Water Street, is part of Salisbury.• Mechare reported a snag with the Small Town Economic Assistance Program state grant for the D.M. Hunt Library (for $200,000). The problem (an incorrect date) is trivial but requires resubmitting materials.• Mechare also reported the resignation of Rick Kubarek from the Water Commission and as an alternate member of the Zoning Board of Appeals, effective June 30 (Kubrarek is moving.) The board accepted the resignation with regret and appointed Dave Blass to replace Kubarek on the Water Commission.

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