Vallejo City Council asked to approve reopening of Glen Cove fire station; expected to cost $2 million

by John Glidden | July 6, 2021

VALLEJO – A fire station shuttered over a decade ago due to the city’s financial issues may soon re-open.

The Vallejo City Council will be asked Tuesday to approve the the re-opening of Station 26, located at 1585 Fulton Ave. in the Glen Cove area of the city. Station 26 was closed in 2010 following the city’s entrance into bankruptcy two years prior.

In a staff report to the city council, interim Vallejo Fire Chief Kyle Long wrote that he expects it will cost the city nearly $2 million million to open the fire station during the current fiscal year.

However, he noted that those costs have not been budgeted for the 2021-22 fiscal year.

Long suggested that the monies could be reimbursed through the American Rescue Plan. Vallejo is expected to receive nearly $26 million in funding. The city has yet to determine how to spend the money.

The costs include $800,000 for a fire engine, an additional $450,000 for a separate apparatus truck, $300,000 for station repairs, and $30,000 to furnish the station, along with $70,000 for any contingencies.

Long further noted that the department has been able to fill long-term vacancies through a series of grants, eliminating the need to temporarily increase staffing levels for the re-opening of Station 26.

But future monies for staffing is still in doubt. The department has applied for a grant last year to pay for nine firefighters.

“If received, the City will not have to increase the General Fund funded FTE count for the Department, nor have to pay for the additional firefighters, until Fiscal Year 2026-2027, at which point the department would have to increase total General Fund funded suppression staffing by nine to absorb the 2020 SAFER-funded firefighters,” Long wrote.

Should the department not get the 2020 grant, the city’s general fund will have to foot the bill for the coming fiscal years: $688,000 (FY 2022-23); $2,292,000 (FY 2023-24); $2,363,000 (FY 2024-25); $2,391,000 (FY 2025-26).

Those costs are in addition to $535,000 for ongoing operating costs, including $300,000 for staffing not covered by the grant, with the balance toward vehicle maintenance.

Vallejo City Councilwoman Mina Diaz, district 3, has called for the station to be re-opened since she was elected to the city council in November 2020. The station is located in her council district. Diaz couldn’t be immediately reached for comment.

The council is also being asked to approve amending the city’s budget, which is a two-step process. If approved Tuesday, councilors will need to approve the change in budget a second time, which will be scheduled for a future meeting.

The Vallejo City Council will meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday via teleconference. Members of the public may provide public comments during the meeting via ZOOM (https://ZoomRegular.Cityofvallejo.net), or via phone, by dialing (669) 900­6833.

The public can view the meeting through three ways: Watch Vallejo local channel 28; stream from the city website: http://www.cityofvallejo.net/Streaming; join the Zoom webinar: https://ZoomRegular.Cityofvallejo.net.


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Published by John Glidden

John Glidden is a freelance journalist reporting on the city of Vallejo. The native Vallejoan also covers the local school district, Vallejo elections, and public safety.

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