Suspended Pennsylvania Company Returns to Service -- Boatless

Sept. 8, 2012
In order to be reinstated, the company agreed to hand the boat over to FEMA.

Bensalem Township's volunteer Union Fire Company returned to service Friday after a two-month suspension, with new leaders and an agreement to give up its $940,000 firefighting and rescue boat.

"As of noon today, we're responding to all emergencies," said Chief James Barford, the former deputy chief, who has served in the fire company near the Delaware River for 48 years.

"The guys are just celebrating that they're back working, responding to emergencies," Barford said. "That's all we ever wanted to do."

The company, based on State Road, was suspended July 10 by township Public Safety Director Fred Harran for "a total lack of leadership."

Harran cited the company's purchase of a jet-powered, 37-foot fireboat "it has no need for." A federal port security grant supplied $750,000 of the purchase price, but covering the balance and operating and mooring costs were a serious drain on the small company's finances, township officials said.

It was the second suspension in 13 months for Union - the latest chapter in a long-standing clash of personalities and politics.

Former Chief Dave Jerri refused to meet Harran's conditions for reinstatement, which included a new chief and president, and getting rid of the boat, christened Marine 37 but nicknamed "the Bear on the Delaware."

"They've been threatening to do this since the last time," Jerri said at the time, referring to the ouster of Chief Vince Troisi last summer.

The company, which has two other boats, needs the "Bear" for emergencies on the Delaware, such as fires, capsized boats, and body recoveries, Jerri said. There have been about four such calls in the last year.

Harran criticized the company's performance, saying it answered the fewest calls of the township's six volunteer companies, had the worst response time and safety issues, and lacked a recruiting program.

"They're more interested in the boat than fighting fires," he said.

Jerri and company president Steve Carmichael stepped down, replaced by Barford and John Knowles. The company immediately started recruiting members, going door to door, and signing up 16 firefighters, Barford said. Membership is now up to about 37, he said.

To qualify for reinstatement, the company also installed a new slate of operational and administrative officers, established an extensive remediation plan, and will be on probation through the end of the year, Harran said Friday in a statement.

Its new leaders agreed to turn the "Bear" over to the Federal Emergency Management Agency, which will find an organization that can put it to better use.

"It's going to take some time before something happens with the boat," said Barford, who hopes to recoup the money Union sank into the boat. "It will be handled by the federal government.

"We're not using it."

Contact Bill Reed at 215-801-2964, [email protected], or follow @breedbucks on Twitter. Read his blog, "BucksInq," at www.philly.com/bucksinq.

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