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Established | 1999 |
Employees | 245 uniformed 6 civilian |
Staffing | Career |
Fire chief | Frank Montagne |
Facilities and equipment | |
Stations | 14 |
Engines | 6 |
Trucks | 4 |
Squads | 5 |
Rescues | 1 |
Fireboats | 1 |
North Hudson Regional Fire and Rescue (NHRFR) provides fire protection and medical assistance to the North Hudson communities of North Bergen, Union City, Weehawken, West New York, and Guttenburg, New Jersey. The fire department serves a population of over 195,000 people.
Its members numbered 76 when it opened in 1999, but was 51 as of June 2010. According to North Hudson Regional Firefighters Association President Dominick Marino, this is enough to respond to one fire in North Hudson at a time, but asserted that numerous promotions that month, and the closing of Ladder 2 a week later would hurt response time. As of July 2010, the department's total compliment numbers 273, including firefighters, officers and staff, and its firehouses numbered 15.
In July 2010, NHRFR chaiperson and Weehawken Mayor Richard Turner boasted that whereas the national standard is a five minute response time to fires, NHRFR's is slightly under two minutes.
The current Fire Chief is Frank Montagne.
History
Discussions to consolidate the North Hudson fire departments began in the early 1980s.
The North Hudson Regional Fire and Rescue (NHRFR) was established on January 11, 1999. The former fire departments of North Bergen, Union City, Weehawken, West New York, and Guttenburg were merged to provide a safer, more efficient fire department. The department is divided into three battalions, which comprise a fire apparatus fleet of six engines, four ladders, four squads, one rescue, and one fire boat, that operate out of 15 fire stations, located throughout the five communities. Three of these companies are only manned from 7:30a.m. to 7:30p.m. daily.
The agency created a new headquarters on Port Imperial Boulevard in West New York in 2007 to serve the waterfront area.
North Hudson Regional Fire and Rescue was among the many Hudson County agencies that responded to the January 2009 crash of Flight 1549, for which they received accolades from the survivors.
In July 2009, North Hudson Regional Fire and Rescue began closing their Rescue Company and the rotational closings of three engine companies. The following January, two buildings adjacent to Engine Company 9 burned down while the company was closed.
The organization opened a two-story firehouse in June 2010 at 4300 Kennedy Boulevard, purchased for $1.2 million, and renovated for $1.5 million, in part with a $500,000 federal grant. The building will house Engine Company 5, formerly housed in a building a block away that Union City Mayor Brian P. Stack described as "antiquated", as well as Rescue Company 1. Stack further stated that the Kennedy Boulevard location, which is actually located off Kennedy Boulevard, would give the firefighters easier access to the area, as Kennedy Boulevard is a four-lane road that runs through the entire county, whereas the previous location was situated in the middle of a block. The agency's dispatch center, which was formed 30 years previously, also moved to a new state-of-the-art facility at the new location, as the equipment at its former, less spacious location at 50th Street and Broadway was deemed outdated.
The agency rotated the closing of various firehouses for certain hours in order to save money until July 2010, when it closed two of its firehouses, according to NHRFR chairperson and Weehawken Mayor Richard F. Turner, in order to allow the remaining 16 to stay open 24 hours, and save $500,000 in overtime costs from July 1 until the end of 2010. Turner further disclosed that the newly implemented Strategic Reorganization Plan, which took two years to create, would also save additional funds. Though Turner insisted that this would not affect performance, Dominick Marino, the head of the North Hudson Firefighters Association, reacted to the closings by stating that this would sacrifice response time from certain locations, and that with the closing of Ladder 2, the agency would not have enough firefighters. According to Marino, "Evidence shows that responding at the same time eliminates the circumstances a lot quicker than having to wait." Marino further asserted that the closing of Engine 6 would mean that the entire west area of North Bergen would lose coverage, and that the promotion of 22 people to higher ranks in the last week of June, including 14 captains, five battalion chiefs and two deputies, meant that there was insufficient personnel to keep the houses open. Turner stated that hiring would be considered, based on upcoming retirements. Turner later stated the intention to hire new members in early 2011.
The agency's 2010 budget, which was passed on August 17, 2010, is $55.9 million, a 3% increase from the previous year's budget of $54.2 million, with the largest increase in health benefits, which are covered by Horizon Blue Cross. (The NHRFR was previously covered by Cigna.) The August 17 meeting also saw the passing of a resolution allowing the agency to pay contractual terminal benefits, or retirement packages, to firefighters over the course of the five years following their retirement, instead of entirely within the year of their retirement. This resolution followed the passing a New Jersey state law (N.J.S.A.40A:4-53) that NHRFR officials indicated supersedes contractual obligations with unions.
On December 12, 2011, the Third Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that the squad's hiring policy discriminated against African-Americans, because it only accepted residents of local towns, who are predominantly Latino and Caucasian. The lawsuit, which was filed in 2007 by the Newark branch of the NAACP on behalf of three black firefighters, was the latest development in a longstanding controversy over whether the NHRFR should hire applicants from outside towns.
Firehouses
Active firehouses
- Rescue 1, 43rd Street and Kennedy Boulevard, on the Union City-North Bergen border, opened in June 2010. Previously housed at 66th and Tonnelle
- 66th Street and Jackson Street in Guttenberg, used only for training as of July 2010.
- Engine 4, 29th Street and Central Avenue in Union City, also home to Deputy 1. It was also the home to Ladder 2 until July 2010.
Closed firehouses
- Engine 5, 43rd Street and Bergenline Avenue in Union City, closed in 2010, company moved to 43rd Street and Kennedy Boulevard firehouse.
- Engine 6, 43rd Street and Tonnelle Avenue in North Bergen, closed in 2010, company moved to 43rd Street and Kennedy Boulevard firehouse.
References
- About Us. North Hudson Regional Fire and Rescue. Retrieved December 1, 2011.
- ^ Tirella, Tricia. "New firehouse for regional squad" The Union City Reporter; June 13, 2010; Pages 3 & 7
- ^ Tirella, Tricia. "North Hudson FD closes two firehouses", The Union City Reporter, July 4, 2010, Pages 3 and 15
- "North Hudson Regional Fire Department events" Hudson Dispatch Weekly, December 23, 2010, Page 7
- "New Jersey Journal". New York Times. April 12, 1981. Retrieved 2011-01-27.
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(help) - North Hudson Regional Fire and Rescue History page Accessed January 14, 2009
- Smothers, Ronald (January 12, 1999). "Regional Fire Service Succeeds in Its First Test". New York Times. Retrieved 2011-01-27.
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(help) - North Hudson Regional Fire and Rescue at Firefighting News; Accessed June 16, 2010
- "Miracle on the Hudson' survivors to return to waterfront", The Union City Reporter, July 26, 2009, Page 4
- Tricia Tirella. "A pat on the back" The Union City Reporter; Pages 5 & 17
- Hack, Charles. "North Bergen fire ruins two buildings two doors down from closed firehouse" Jersey Journal/NJ.com; January 18, 2010
- ^ Tirella, Tricia. "Regional fire dept. budget up 3 percent" The Union City Reporter; September 5, 2010; Pages 5 and 7
- "Briefs" The Union City Reporter. December 18, 2011. Pages 2 and 5.