Firehouse estimate: $3.49 million


KENT — At Tuesday’s Board of Finance meeting, First Selectman Ruth Epstein distributed copies of a letter from Firehouse Building Committee Chairman Matt Winter.

The letter recommends that the cost of construction for the proposed new consolidated firehouse be estimated at $3.49 million for the purposes of financing and presentation to the public.

The letter breaks the costs down as $3 million for direct design and construction costs, $300,000 for contingency, $150,000 for fixtures, furnishings and equipment, and $40,000 for special testing and permits.

Five bids, ranging from $2.4 to $3.17 million, were received March 9. The committee is interviewing the contractors Saturday, March 31. The letter states the committee "anticipates selecting a contractor soon thereafter with final negotiations extending into the week of April 9 and beyond."

The plan must be approved by town taxpayers before it is included in any budgets. And while the final cost will be alleviated somewhat by two state STEAP grants ($800,000) and money raised by the Volunteer Fire Department ($140,000), the total cost is the amount that must be included in the language of the referendum.

STEAP stands for Small Town Economic Assistance Program.

Finance Chairman George Jacobsen raised several possibilities for financing strategies, including tapping into money already set aside for Kent Center School as a short-term maneuver. "Does it make sense to borrow X when we have a reserve for the school that is a certain percentage of X?" he asked.

Some short-term borrowing is probably unavoidable, he added, noting that STEAP funds are only released when a project is complete. "And I somehow doubt the state stays up late nights cutting checks to towns," he said wryly.

The goal at this point, Jacobsen said, is to "devise a number the taxpayer can use" when voting on the firehouse. The board will try to arrange a meeting with a representative of the firehouse committee for Monday or Tuesday of next week to get more information.

But as finance board member Chris Garrity noted, "This time last year we were nowhere near this stage" of planning for a new firehouse.


— Patrick L. Sullivan

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