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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 24, 1960)
Operations of Rural Fire Department Are Reviewed Central Point-C. C. Thomp son, chairman of the board of directors of the Central Point Rural Fire Protection district, said Friday the district's bud get for this fiscal year is the smallest in the last five years, "and nearly 10 per cent under our 6 per cent limitation." Thompson, in lieu of an an nual report, reviewed 1959 operations, presented a gener al picture of the district's fi nancial position, and made recommendations for the 1960-61 fiscal year. He said "the budget board and the board of directors lived up to our promises to the voters to reduce the bud get substantially if they would pay off the indebted ness on the equipment." As a result, this year's budget is the smallest in the last five fiscal years, he noted. "We will this year spend $1,750 on replacement and new equipment," he said. New equipment, he added, is for the protection of firemen. both paid employees and vol unteers. Increases in Pay Moderate increases in pay were given employed staff members, Thompson said, but added that "we are still con siderably under the average pay scale for firemen." The board's program has been to bring the pay scale in line with other fire districts as last as the financial position justi fies it, he added. Adequate money is avail able in this year's budget, he said, for the training program and for building maintenance and repair. Thompson said the district is "likely to run a little over the budget on the cost of op erations." This, he noted, is due to a large increase in the number of fires. Firemen were called to 176 during 1959, compared to 129 in 1958, he noted. The cost of operations also has increased because of the increase in the cost of insurance. Increasing the public liability and prop erty damage limits was re sponsible for some of the in crease in the insurance costs, he said. Increase in Efficiency Thompson called attention to the increase in efficiency of the department. In 1956, he said, the fire loss ratio was 18.77 per cent, in 1957 it was 9.46 per cent and in 1958 it was 8.11 per cent. The 1958 national aver age for class 9 protection was 14.99 per cent, he noted. Fig ures for 1959 are not yet available. The fire loss ratio is com puted from the amount of loss against the insured valuation of property under Oregon Rating Bureau standards. Thompson noted that the figures are for insured cov erage only. "While we may run over our budget for this fiscal year by $500 to $1,000, our cash position will show a credit balance of $2,000 to $3,000," Thompson said. Reasons Noted There are two reasons for this, he explained. One is that more taxes have been col lected than anticipated, and the other is revenue from pro tection given to companies like Southern Pacific which are in the district but not on Safeway Stores Here To Offer Stamps Safeway stores in 12 Ore gon cities, including Medford, will offer Gold Bond stamps starting Monday, Jan. 25, ac cording to G. M. Mangan, Portland division manager for Safeway. Other communities where stamps will be offered are Myrtle Point, Coos Bay, Co quille, Florence, North Bend, Newport, Taft. Grants Pass, Redmond. Madras and Bend. Gold Bond stamps entered the Oregon market in Decem ber, 1958. and are offered by several Safeway stores and other retail merchants in the state. The trading stamp com pany, Mangan said, probably will establish a gift center in Medford along with others in the state. Manager of Gold Bonds Oregon division is Orville B. Hammer, Portland. Business Meeting Slated in Portland Portland The second an nual business conference sponsored by the University of Oregon's school of business administration will be held Feb. 3 at the Benson hotel i here. Authorities in the field of economics will lead discus sions on the Landrum-Griffin act, the Ford Foundation and Carnegie Corporation, prob lems of urban decentralization in the next 10 years, and the Communist economic threat. Information c o n c em ing registration is available from the school of business admin istration offices in Eugene. the district's tax rolls. As of Jan. 1, Thompson re ported, the district had a credit balance of more than $13,000 with the second and third quarter payments still to be received by the county treasurer. Expenses for the balance of this fiscal year should be only slightly more than $14,000, he said. Replacement . of the dis trict's pickup truck and in creases in pay or a retirement program, or a combination of both, should be considered in the future program, Thomp son said. Either in the next fiscal year, or in the 1961-62 fiscal year, the district should replace the second McCulloch pump. Increases in the 1960-61 budget, he said, should be made for operation of the fire department, particularly for the operation and repair of equipment. The assessed valuation of the district for the next fiscal year should increase from the present $9,200,000 to about $9,500,000, Thompson said. This, with the cash carry over, should enable the district to budget an additional $2,000 more than this year's budget and still remain within the 6 per cent limitation, he added. MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Or. Sunday, Jan. 24, I960 OFFER RESOLUTION" Washington -0IPU Two doz en House members asked Con gress Thursday to express "a profound sense of indignation and shock" at the desecration of places of worship at home and abroad. The resolution was offered by Rep. Barratt O'Hara (D-Ill.) on behalf of the bipartisan sponsors. Woman Succumbs After Home Fire Dallas, Ore.-flJPD-Mrs. Oleda Riggs Lloyd. 49, Grand Ronde, died in a Dallas hospital today of burns suffered in a house fire Thursday night. Willamina Fire Chief Jim Shipley said the woman had been trapped in a small house she shared with her brother, Roger Riggs. Riggs told firemen he tried to start a fire in a wood stove about 10 p.m., using a can of gasoline. There was an ex plosion and he was driven out of the house. Flames trapped his sister, who had been asleep on a sofa. A neighbor, Knute Strom, broke into the house and car ried the woman out. He suf fered hand burns. 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