Friday, April 29, 2022 | Seaside Signal | SeasideSignal.com • A5 LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Continued from Page A4 we must prepare for the unthinkable. There’s a way out of this if we’re bold enough to meet the challenge. As a former volunteer firefighter and rescue worker, I’m intimately aware of the sacrifices that our safety workers make daily to ensure that our visitors and residents are protected. I encourage you to give them your full support by taking the high ground and voting yes for Mea- sure 4-213 on the upcoming ballot. Jay Speakman Gearhart New location offers safety, protects equipment While I have all due respect for Chief Preston Devereaux and the years he vol- unteered with Gearhart Volunteer Fire Department and the months he served as chief, I need to respond to his April 14 letter. In 2006 retired Devereaux co-wrote a letter saying the proposed $3.75 mil- lion bond measure for a municipal had to many bells a whistles and was unneces- sary. The bond failed. Almost five years ago, the city pro- posed a station at the park which included extending it into the dunes to make it bigger. Opposition caused bond failure. The city tried to keep it close to town at Marion and 13th, the High Point loca- tion. After months of due diligence, opposition worked behind the scenes and the owners decided not to sell. The new owners of the Highland prop- erty offered to transfer ownership of five acres to the city for a new fire/police sta- tion at a 65-foot elevation. The High- land location protects the equipment nec- essary to begin recovery. A tsunami will restrict responsiveness until water levels recede. Once volunteers have taken care of their families, they will proceed to the station to help our community. The current location is not large enough for a new station and Ordinance 924 doesn’t allow it. Gearhart Volun- teer Fire Department responds to sig- nificantly more calls, has higher training and regulatory requirements. The Gear- hart Volunteer Fire Department of 2022 is not the same as the fire department of the 1990s. Now is the time! Vote yes on Measure 4-213. Randall C Como Present assistant chief Gearhart Volunteer Fire Department Our future safety depends on ‘yes’ vote For good reasons, the city of Gearhart asks voters for a “yes” vote on Measure 4-213, a bond for a resilient fi re and police station. The highly dedicated and well-trained men and women of the Gearhart Fire Department responded to more than 660 emergency calls last year in their service to our community. We must all agree that citi- zens’ safety and property are the top priori- ties of any local government. I know the fi refi ghters’ conditions they operate in and have talked to the fi refi ghters about the struggles they endure every day. Please vote yes for the bond that will replace a below-standard and non-code compliant station and build a resilient facil- ity. I clearly understand that this request does not come from what is wanted but rather a need for our community. Gearhart has spent decades review- ing the information, consulting with the experts, and making the best choice now available given the previous compromises. And, too, all four of the past mayors of Gearhart support this bond. Passage of this bond will allow Gear- hart fi re and police departments to have a facility to operate at a level of safety for the foreseeable future. A “yes” vote on Measure 4-213 equals 84 cents per day or an additional $307 annually on my home. Indeed, just pen- nies per day for the future safety of my hometown. Denise Fairweather Gearhart Jerome Kersey a worthy subject I within the last year or so relocated to Seaside with my wife. I pick up a copy of the Signal at Safeway when I can. I have been some what a follower of the Los Angeles Lakers over the years. I opened my copy of the Signal this past week and saw an article that, an author who wrote a book on former Blazer Jerome Kersey is coming to Seaside. I am looking forward to buying a copy and meeting this author. Kersey was always a Laker killer over the years the Blazers played them. I always dreaded it when, Kersey, Drexler and those guys were up next on the schedule. Mr. Kersey actu- ally played for the Lakers for a season and I liked that. Which also meant he had to take on his former Portland team a few times. As a newcomer to the area I am fi nd- ing I should be a fan of the Blazers now. Purchasing this book and hearing from the author should give me a good insight to the team back then and quite possibly even now. Thank you Seaside Signal for that wonderful article and I am looking for- ward to meeting the author. I hope you can provide more for me on my new team I fi nd myself following into the future. Tom Jenkins Gearhart Firehouse plan will attract fi refi ghting volunteers I honestly respect the right of those folks who say no to the Gearhart Resil- iency Station bond measure. But why vote no? Maybe they’re stuck on the blueprint concept scope studied and recommended by the National Fire Protection Associa- tion. The plan is designed to attract and maintain certifi ed fi refi ghting volunteers, not a paid team. Is it really an overwhelm- ing footprint vision for this growing town? Is the cost of the bond the real reason for shouting “no”? Or is it the powerful nostalgic heart tug of that old cinderblock green engine garage? Sorry but it is outdated and inad- equate in every respect. One small bath- room. They make coff ee and clean up their toxic gear in the same stained sink. There’s no exhaust system to clear engine fumes. Understandably change is hard but let’s get smart and rip off the Band-Aid. A new higher ground home for our fi re and police is critically important to pro- vide the civic services we all demand and depend on. Gearhart is unbelievably blessed to have 27 volunteer fi refi ghters who have the very same level of certifi ca- tions — yes, same level — as Portland and Seattle paid responders. Our volunteers are professional in every way. There for us 24/7/365. Please give them the respect they give us with your vote yes. The beautiful Gear- hart Volunteer Fire Department traditions are here to stay. Neon engines will still lead the Fourth of July parade, there’s still going to be an Easter egg hunt and a giant Christmas tree lighting Pacifi c Way. Please give them the respect they give us with your vote yes on Measure 4-213. Vickie Abrahamson Gearhart We cannot aff ord to wait The citizens of Gearhart will be vot- ing in less than a month on the future of our Gearhart current fi re station. The “no” voters have made their campaign about the cost of $14.5 million and taxes. If you have been following the correspondence of letters to the paper, or in mailings, it has been shown how minimal the tax impact will really be. What the “no” voters have not addressed is how the cost to build a new fi re station has consistently increased. In just two years the cost has gone from a $10.5 million bond proposed in 2020 to a $13 million bond in 2021! The 2021 $13.5 million bond was chal- lenged by the “no” voters and caused the city to miss a ballot deadline. The city of Gearhart won the challenge on all counts. However, due to that challenge we now are looking at a $14.5 million bond. So if not now when? Every year we delay, we all know what is inevitable. The cost to replace our cur- rent fi re station, which was built by volun- teers on concrete blocks in 1958, will only continue to increase. By the way, in 2006 a $3.75 million bond to rebuild on the current site failed. Vote yes on Measure 4-213. Betty Smith Gearhart If not now, when? Gearhart is not as divisive as you might think. Most of us who live in Gearhart agree that our volunteer fi refi ghters are an amazing asset to our community. We also agree that our current fi re station is old, inadequate and literally crumbling down, and that we need a new station. We all agree that if the fi re station bond passes, our taxes will go up. Well, yes they will. So there, most of us agree on some- thing. So, this is good. The issue that causes a division among us is the construction of a new fi re sta- tion and the cost of such a structure. Our mayor, Paulina Cockrum, recently asked the question, “If not now, when?” If we wait another year, fi ve years or more, the price of a new station will only go up, and our taxes will only increase. Meanwhile, our fi refi ghters will still be in an inadequate, cramped facility that is lit- erally disintegrating around them. So, this is not good. As an aside, I know that a new station is being called a “resiliency station,” as it would also house our police department, but, hey, I live in Gearhart and, to me, it will always be a fi re station. Maybe I will change my mind. Maybe not. Our community needs a new station, whatever it’s called. I encourage the pass- ing of our bond, for the good of Gearhart. If not now, when? Think about it. This is good. Reita Fackerell Gearhart