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Schumer Pledges Support for Nassau Fire Departments and Volunteer Ambulance Corps

Calls on FEMA to approve grant for emergency radio upgrades

United States Senator Charles E. Schumer was given a warm welcome when he visited the Village of Floral Park Fire Department Headquarters on Monday, Jan. 27. Schumer revealed to a small crowd that more than 70 Nassau County fire departments and seven volunteer ambulance corps are facing major budget hikes in order to meet the year-end deadlines to upgrade existing radio equipment due to federal mandates.

Schumer had only the highest of praise for the volunteer firefighters who came from cities across Nassau County, including Stewart Manor, Garden City, Bellerose, New Hyde Park, Great Neck, Island Park, Valley Stream, East Williston, Port Washington, Bayville, Freeport, Wantagh, and Oceanside, Lakeview.

“As you know I care a lot about our firefighters; they are great people. Nassau County volunteer fire departments are among the best in the country,” Schumer said, adding, “They risk their lives, they don’t get paid to make us safe. It’s a great thing and everyone here in this county is blessed by the quality of the fire departments.”

In order to comply with soon-to-be imposed federal mandates, Schumer is calling on the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) to approve a funding application on behalf of more than 70 Nassau County volunteer fire departments and seven volunteer ambulance corps to purchase the radio equipment that meets the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) frequency mandate.

The importance of having effective communication among first responders is something Schumer said is essential during an emergency situation. “We all learned effectively on 9/11 when there wasn’t good communication,” he said.

Currently, all medical communications between NCPD’s Medical Control, the local fire departments and ambulance companies are conducted over a UHF frequency. The 20-year-old system is considered to be antiquated and not technologically advanced enough to be reprogrammed to meet FCC requirements. The new mandate will require that all emergency communications operate on a narrow-band frequency at 12.5 kHz efficiency and will allow for the creation of additional channel capacity within the same radio spectrum and support more users.

“On Jan. 1, 2013, every emergency unit in the U.S., including every Nassau County fire department and volunteer ambulance company, is required to update their system to this new technology or face fines. Unfortunately, like all improvements, this one costs some money that the county and fire departments don’t have,” Schumer explained.

Individual radios could cost as much as $3,500 per unit and the full upgrade will cost more than half a million dollars for all county departments, according to Schumer. “The bottom line is simple, if the federal government is going to require an expensive federal mandate, then the federal government should help pay for it. The burden should not be placed on either our local fire departments or on the taxpayer,” he said.

It was also announced that Nassau County Police Fire Department in conjunction with fire department and ambulance companies applied for $661,000 in funding, under the Assistance to Firefighters Grant Program. The monies would enable Nassau County to migrate to a state-of-the-art and FCC-compliant medical communications system.

Schumer said he called FEMA Administrator William Craig Fugate that same morning to tell him how important this grant application was. “I am here to pledge to these firefighters and all the men and women that they represent that I do everything I can to see that we get this federal grant,” he told the firefighters.

To illustrate the scope of the equipment needed, Schumer cited the amount of upgrades needed for the Hicksville Fire Department: a total of seven radios for four ambulances, two fire medic cars and a dispatch. The Wantagh Fire Department needs to upgrade five ambulances; one fire medic; one safety car; and a dispatch radio for a total of eight upgrades. “You go across the county and you are going to see that this is going to be an expensive proposition,” Schumer told the crowd.

Floral Park Mayor Tom Tweedy thanked Schumer for his efforts and welcomed him to the village. “You are one of the hardest working senators in Washington,” he said. “I really want to thank you and appreciate all you’re doing on behalf of the various villages,” Tweedy added.

In an interview with the Floral Park Dispatch, Floral Park Fire Chief John Kelleher said with additional grant funding, he hopes communications among the ambulance companies will improve for the betterment of the community. “It’s going to be essential because they are no longer going to be providing low-band radios, so now we are going to need this newer higher band radio…this is a major improvement,” Kelleher said.

Floral Park’s Fire Commissioner and Village Trustee Mary-Grace Tomecki also advocated the importance of receiving the grant in these difficult economic times. “Senator Schumer has always been a good friend to the Village of Floral Park and we are grateful for his assistance once again, in our efforts to minimize the impact of unfunded mandates on our residents. Moreover, by helping us to secure funding for a MedCom radio system for our ambulance, as well as those of neighboring companies, he is ensuring that Floral Park’s all-volunteer Rescue Company is able to maintain communications, while living up to its motto ‘Forever vigilant, always prepared.’”

News

L.I. native John Tesh set to bring Big Band to Westbury

The quintessential example of being able to take the boy out of his hometown but not the hometown out of the boy, John Tesh once again returns to the area in support of his latest musical project. On Saturday, May 12, he will be playing the NYCB Theatre at Westbury in support of his latest album, Big Band.

A former Garden City resident, Tesh has always carried a special place in his heart for the village despite the fact that his family moved out following his graduation from high school in 1970. Those formative years living on Seabury Road inspired him to not only lend his hometown’s name to the title track of his 1989 album, but do the same when he founded a recording imprint in 2000. When asked about this inspiration while preparing for the upcoming tour at his Los Angeles home, Tesh came up with an interesting rationale.

Elmont School District taxpayers could see a 6.9 percent increase

Residents attending the Stewart Manor Board of Trustees meeting on Tuesday, May 1, gave a resounding thumbs-down to the 2012-13 proposed budget for the Elmont Union Free School District. The proposed $78.56 million budget marks a 2.8 percent increase from 2011-12 and would yield a 6.87 percent tax levy jump over last year. The majority of village residents live within the Elmont district, but many homes on Fernwood Terrace are zoned for Garden City public schools.

Residents present at the May 1 meeting questioned why Elmont’s proposed increase is so much higher than the other 56 districts in Nassau County, with the exception of neighboring Floral Park-Bellerose, which is proposing a budget that would increase taxes by 6.58 percent. Residents also expressed concern that the nearly 6.9 percent increase exceeds the state’s 2 percent cap on property tax increases.


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