The City of Alexander has received a $5,000 grant for the fire
department with the help of State Representative Kim Hammer who submitted the
grant application on the city's behalf. At the city's March 17 council meeting
Mayor Michelle Hobbs told council members she has received the check. But now
the question is how can it be spent.
Alderman Juanita Wilson said Hammer had heard about the fire
department's recent difficulties and contacted her about possibly qualifying
for a grant. She told him about the recent acquisition of a fire truck from the
forestry service, which needs to be repaired. Also, the department is always in
need of equipment.
However, when Assistant Fire Chief William Blankenship received the
grant request form to fill out he wrote in the "Project Description"
section, "To help equip a fire engine received from the Forestry
Commission, relocate dryer to different area and to construct a screened-in
deck onto the fire station."
This did not go well with Wilson or Alderman Andrea Bearden. Bearden
told Blankenship he didn't need a grant to move the dryer closer to the washer
and the fire department doesn't need a deck.
"You stated three meetings ago you needed a pump test done on all
fire trucks at $1,800 each," Bearden said to Blankenship. "Why was
this not included in the request?"
Blankenship said he added those items to bring the request up to the
maximum amount of the grant, $5,000. Both Bearden and Wilson said he should
have included the $1,800 pump test instead.
Bearden told Blankenship, "if you spend one dime of this money for
a smoke deck or moving a dryer do not ask me to fix any vehicle."
Mayor Michelle Hobbs said she will find out what the grant money
can be spent on before she signs the check.
UPDATE:
Alderman Juanita Wilson has posted an update to this article. According
to her post she spoke to Amanda Adaire, Program Manager of Central Arkansas
Planning and Development District, the agency that disburses these types of
grants. According to her post she explained to Adaire the grant request should
have listed needs similar to repairing the former Forestry Service fire truck,
like pump tests and other equipment needs.
Wilson told Adaire the request to move a dryer and build a smoking deck,
"were considered frivolous by the council."
During the finance portion of the meeting Alderman Faye McKeon asked why
the distribution of a one-cent sales tax was changed back to giving one-eighth
of a cent to the fire department and five-eighths to police. Hobbs said the
council lifted the spending freeze at the last meeting so she told the
bookkeeper to change the sales tax distribution.
Bearden told Hobbs only the spending freeze
was lifted. The sales tax distribution was a separate vote. The mayor claims changing
the tax distribution will empty the police department account.
City bookkeeper Ruby
Whitaker was at the council meeting and will go back to distributing the sales
tax as instructed by the council.
During a special finance meeting held January 21 five out of six
members of the Alexander city council voted to stop all non-essential spending
until the city's finances are back in order. The decision came after
discovering revenue for the fire department had been used to fund other
departments. The freeze limited spending to payroll, utilities, fuel, or a
declaration of an emergency. The
spending freeze was lifted at the regular February meeting by a five to three
vote.
Because the fire department fund is low the council, at the January 21
meeting, also decided to change how a one-cent sales tax approved by voters in
2003 is distributed. According to the wording on the ballot the tax "shall
be distributed" with "3/4% of the revenue for the Police/Fire
Department; and 1/4% of the revenue for Parks and Recreation."
In the past the 3/4% was divided evenly between police and fire, 3/8%
each. Apparently that practice stopped since Hobbs became mayor, giving the
fire department 1/8% and the police department 5/8%.
McKeon told council members because the ballot measure did not specify
the 3/4% be "evenly divided" between police and fire the council can
mandate how to split it between the two departments. In a five to three vote the
council approved changing the distribution of the 3/4% giving the fire
department 5/8% and the police department 1/8%. The two absent council members
count as "no" votes.
The fire department also receives an entire one-cent sales tax from a
ballot measure approved in 2005.