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MINUTES OF THE <br /> ORONO CITY COUNCIL MEETING <br /> May 22,2023 <br /> 6:00 o'clock p.m. <br /> Johnson pointed out this is not because the fire fighters are not doing their jobs but because of the <br /> limitations of an all-call system where Hennepin County calls everyone from any station because there <br /> are not enough fire fighters during the day for the Navarre Station. Duty Crews would put four fire <br /> fighters on duty during the day when the City is most vulnerable, allowing for four or five minute <br /> response times. <br /> Seals asked how duty crews would affect current volunteer fire fighters and their call ratios. <br /> Van Eyll said that had not been determined but it would be worked out so that fire fighters did not lose or <br /> have reduced pension credits because of duty crews.Returning to the Power Point, Van Eyll outlined four <br /> possible courses of action and the costs and pros and cons of each. One, Orono assumes control of the <br /> existing Long Lake Department;two, establishment of a joint fire district with up to 11 other cities;three, <br /> an Orono Municipal Fire Department with only paid on-call fire fighters;and four, a municipal Fire <br /> Department with both duty crews and paid on-call fire fighters. Staff recommends option four. He said <br /> options one and two would increase per-household costs and result in Orono subsidizing other cities and <br /> option three would not move the City past rural response time standards to suburban and would make <br /> recruitment difficult because of being strictly paid on call. The increased cost of Option Four would be <br /> an additional$88 per household with partners. Costs would be higher without partners.He recommended <br /> adopting option four which would create a suburban area demand zone with 24/7 duty crews and offering <br /> contracts for services to surrounding communities using the Minnesota League of Municipalities formula <br /> for sharing costs. Van Eyll said Long Lake's current proposal for taking over the Fire Department would <br /> be very costly to the City of Orono with an average increase per year per household of$371.86. <br /> Johnson pointed out that Orono has already been paying for 85 percent of the Fire Department costs and <br /> so much of what Long Lake is asking would be like paying again for the same items and service.He also <br /> said Orono has to ask itself if it is satisfied with a rural level average response time of 16 or more minutes <br /> on a medical call. <br /> Seals noted that she is married to a local fire fighter and part of her wanted to just agree to Long Lake's <br /> proposal because the situation is hard on fire fighters and their families.However,she said it is the <br /> taxpayer's money and she questioned if taxpayers would be comfortable with giving away half of a fire <br /> station and then paying the proposed lease costs. <br /> Van Eyll said the staff recommends establishing the Fire Department and assuming control of the Navarre <br /> Station as of July 1, 2024, allowing for a gradual transition. He said that recommendation would include <br /> increased costs and the possibility of disputes between Orono and Long Lake during the last 18 months of <br /> the contract. The other option would be to stand up the municipal department on Jan. 1,2026 which <br /> would defer some costs to later years,make a clean break and possibly minimize disputes,but would <br /> allow a shortened transition time and a delay in getting a Fire Department ID number from the State Fire <br /> Marshall's Office. <br /> Walsh asked for questions from Council. <br /> Benson asked about Station One in the event that the contract comes to an end without a resolution. <br /> Page 5 of 12 <br />