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Two Muncie fire stations opening this weekend

Published: Tuesday, February 7, 2012

Updated: Friday, February 10, 2012 15:02

Fire_Sally2.jpg

DN PHOTO SALLY GEORGE

Located on Broadway Avenue, a fire truck sits outside of fire station six that will reopen on Saturday. The building is still having construction done to it but is expected be finished by Saturday.

Two open house celebrations will happen this weekend to celebrate the reopening of a pair of Muncie fire stations.

The McCulloch Park and Mock Avenue fire stations will be opening their doors Saturday, Feb. 11, to the public for open house celebrations. The McCulloch Park festivities will begin at noon, followed by Mock Avenue at 2 p.m.

The McCulloch Park fire station has been closed since February of 2011 due to flooding and mold damage. Due to how extensive the damage is, most of the renovating efforts have been concentrated on this station.

"We're finishing remodeling downstairs: New cabinetry, new flooring, new furniture," Fire Chief Eddie Bell said. "Everything downstairs was basically destroyed. Now we've been working on the upstairs, just basically making sure everything matches on both levels."

In 2009, during Sharon McShurley's tenure as mayor, the Mock Avenue fire station was closed as a cost-cutting measure. Mayor Dennis Tyler made it part of his mission, during the election, to open these fire stations and create firefighter positions that had been removed.

"It's a great neighborhood out there on Mock and 21st," Bell said. "The people are great and they just want to have their fire station back and, due to the mayor, we're going to have that."

Fire officials stressed the importance of opening the stations for the sake of public safety and maneuvering difficulties of the railroad system in Muncie.

"One of the stations [McCulloch Park] was bound by railroad tracks," Deputy Chief Bret Granger said. "It was a big problem, even from the downtown station running out that way. We got caught at tracks several times."

Despite the additional running fire stations, Mayor Tyler assures the public that this will not have a significant financial impact on the city of Muncie.

"There aren't going to be any additional tax dollars, other than the utilities," Tyler said. "We're not putting anybody in harms way by moving firefighters from one station into another. It's been a very coordinated effort by Chief Bell and Granger and they should be complimented for their efforts."

Not only does Feb. 11 mark the opening of the new fire stations but also the beginning of the new safe house program throughout all Muncie fire stations. The program will provide shelter to victims of abuse throughout Muncie.

Considering all of the preparation for the openings and the safe house program, firefighters from stations around the city were enlisted for help during the past month of renovations.

"The guys within the fire stations themselves have really stepped up to the plate in a huge way to help get these fire stations reopened," Tyler said. "It just means so much to them and what they do as public servants."

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14 comments

Anonymous
Wed Feb 15 2012 08:11
Student journalists are journalists, none the less. They should be asking hard questions, albeit unpopular ones in a single-party dominated political body (whether that's city, state, regional, or national). If a fluff piece is written based on the info given out by the elected officials and the department head, then a reporter ought to dig a bit deeper and ask the hard questions about costs, risks to the city, implications to the new policy, and more. It's easy to write a piece parroting the officials. It's harder to look for the story behind the story. Do I have an agenda? Hardly. Do I rely solely upon the student newspaper? No way. I read widely across print and electronic media sources. If you think asking any journalist to dig deeper into a story is spreading negativity, you need to stick to Pravda and the group-think media outlets representing the right or left. I vote Independent and think independently. Most importantly, I challenge the 1% and 99% equally.
Ameritopia - Mark Levin
Sun Feb 12 2012 20:53
Who gets news about muncie on the BSU paper, well apparently you you dumb dolt! you are either a muncie person (and therefore discredited your own post) or you are a student that cared enough to read it (and therefore discredited your own post). Without owners and financers, the workers would be working.
Anonymous
Sun Feb 12 2012 20:25
"but isn't that the role of various non-profits?"
No, because law says parents have rights to final say over children. Hence private organizations, without court backing, cannot "legally" deny access to possibly abused children, should another parent desire access, even if the other parent is "hiding" with them. A parent who is currently possibly headed to action of instability would still be able to access both children, and possibly spouse, in a private setting.

Hence, the sensibility of a government office undertaking that role directly. You might argue if firefighters are the appropriate officers to undertake this duty, but the argument that life-saving is a primary duty of a firefighter would be at least one solid counterpoint in favor of. Legal challenges to wrongfully acting private organizations would quickly render the point moot anyhow, as few organizations would willingly risk the likely bevy of lawsuits. It is easy, but the recent news of the natural-gas explosion should offer some temper to this..

Anonymous
Sun Feb 12 2012 13:41
Who gets news about their city from a university newspaper geared toward college students? Who does that?

Post your negativity elsewhere, please.

Anonymous
Sat Feb 11 2012 16:57
i have more character flaws than just my general disgust at politics. your chasing shadows.
Anonymous
Sat Feb 11 2012 16:52
yup, cause without workers;

owners would be able to create run 4 different assembly lines, clean debris, inventory, design machines, test machines, and everything else a factory requires to operate, NOT JUST IN ONE FACTORY BUT IN 35, on multiple continents, 24 hours a day, and that is before packaging, branding, sales, shipping....

Yea, labor has no place in our business...

Anonymous
Sat Feb 11 2012 08:44
NOTICE HOW 2 POSTERS DOWN DIDN'T SAY THE MAYOR ISN'T TAKING KICKBACKS, HE JUST SAID IF ONE PERSON DOES IT, ITS OK FOR THE OTHER PERSON .... SHOWS CHARACTER FLAW......ASSUMING THE ACUSATION THAT SHIRLY DID THE SAME THING........WORD!
Anonymous
Sat Feb 11 2012 08:37
oh wow yea people who create wealth rather than union who take wealth! - Assuming your premise was even true.
Anonymous
Fri Feb 10 2012 23:58
oh wow, the unions instead of the business owners like the last mayor? 2 dimes in one hand and 4 nickles in the other.
Anonymous
Thu Feb 9 2012 19:36
tHE Mayor is getting kickbacks from the unions................nuff said
Anonymous
Thu Feb 9 2012 17:52
Sounds to me like you have an agenda and you need to research these points yourself, since relying on these poor college students doesn't suit your fancy.
Anonymous
Thu Feb 9 2012 17:10
Sounds like the DN reporter needs to make another trip to City Hall for a follow-up story. Not just retweet the PR happy-news-release from the Mayor's office and his former employer, the fire department.
Anonymous
Thu Feb 9 2012 08:10
These are good questions. I can think of a few more: Who's paying for the food and drinks at the open house -- taxpayers? The article also said there's a new safe house program starting throughout all Muncie fire stations -- noble cause, but isn't that the role of various non-profits? How much will this noble program cost the city and whose budget is being increased? Will having non-fire firefighters staying on premises cause the insurance rates to go up due to the safety risks? Are fire houses zoned to be residential living quarters for non-city employees? Who qualifiess as a victim of abuse and who makes this determination? Is there a limit on the number of nights that a victim of abuse can stay at the firehouse? Will there be separate living spaces set up for men and women and children?
Anonymous
Thu Feb 9 2012 08:02
A few questions come to mind after reading this article: Where's the money coming from to reopen these surplus stations? The article mentioned renovations -- how much is that costing? Were the fireman who "volunteered" their labor working off the clock? If they were actually paid, how much was that total? If there's money to reopen these fire houses, how about turning on all the street lights in the city? Or how about fixing the potholes all over the city? Or painting traffic lane stripes on the streets?






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