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Fire merger may solve agency
reorganization issue
By Joe
Naiman
The Alpine Sun
EAST COUNTY — One of the funding-related
obstacles to the first phase of reorganizing fire protection and
emergency medical services in unincorporated San Diego County is the
financial situation of the East County Fire Protection District,
which has operated at a deficit for several years. The progress of a
potential merger between the East County Fire Protection District
and the San Miguel Consolidated Fire Protection District could
remove that impediment.
In January the boards of both fire protection districts
approved a merger, which would occur after a study by San Diego
County’s Local Agency Formation Commission and approval by the LAFCO
board. If LAFCO approves such a consolidation, the East County Fire
Protection District area would likely be removed from Phase I of the
reorganization plan.
“That’s what would have to happen,” said Shirley
Anderson, LAFCO’s chief of policy. “It’s not automatic. The
Commission has to make a finding.”
The East County Fire Protection District was created in
1994 by the merger of the non-contiguous Bostonia and Crest fire
districts. The concept of a regional consolidated fire district
includes a promise that the service of better-financed existing
districts won’t be sacrificed to increase service elsewhere.
During a November 2006 LAFCO hearing some LAFCO
commissioners and staff members feared that inclusion of the East
County district’s liabilities would be to the detriment of other
agencies while others noted that Phase I focuses on the underfunded
districts and unserved areas and saw the East County financial
situation as a problem Phase I could resolve when appropriate
financing is obtained.
The proposed fire district reorganization is contingent
upon a stable funding source. LAFCO sent the reorganization plan to
the San Diego County Board of Supervisors in December, and the Phase
I reorganization will be ratified by LAFCO and become official when
the supervisors, who will also become the governing body of the
consolidated agency which will operate as a County Service Area
zone, secure the necessary funding.
Phase I includes the East County, Pine Valley, and San
Diego Rural fire protection districts and the County Service Areas
that provide fire protection and emergency medical services to
Boulevard, Campo, Mount Laguna, and San Pasqual. It also includes
all territory not currently served by a fire agency, including areas
served by volunteer fire departments but not within the boundaries
of a public agency.
The remaining 21 agencies, including the San Miguel
Consolidated Fire Protection District, will be evaluated in Phase II
to determine whether or not consolidation is the most beneficial
option.
Due to automatic aid agreements, the San Miguel
Consolidated Fire Protection District is currently providing service
to the Crest portion of the East County district. The San Miguel
district was formed in 1988 by the merger of the Grossmont-Mount
Helix and Spring Valley fire protection districts.
The East County Fire Protection District board voted to
pursue a merger with the San Miguel district on Jan. 17 while the
San Miguel Consolidated Fire Protection District board approved the
merger plans Jan. 23.
If the East County and San Miguel merger is approved by
the LAFCO board prior to the return of the Phase I reorganization to
LAFCO, the East County area would need to be withdrawn from Phase I.
Such a withdrawal would also involve an adjustment of the financial
needs data for the county fire agency.
“You’re going to have to take both costs and benefits
out,” Anderson said.
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