Ambulance Board member explains increase
The Western News | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 13 years, 6 months AGO
Funds carry over annually for purchases
of new vehicles
While the Lincoln County Ambulance
budget for 2011-’12 reflects a significant increase in funding
there is a reason, said a Libby Volunteer Ambulance Board
member.
Longtime board member Dick Wernham said
the inflated budget numbers reflect funds — $125,817 — carried over
from the previous year for the sole purpose of purchasing a new
ambulance for Eureka.
“All we receive each year is 5½ mills,
so there’s no way we’re getting that much more money,” Wernham
said. “That number is money in our Machinery Fund to allow for
ambulance purchases.”
Wernham explained a portion of the
Ambulance Fund every year is carried over to the next fiscal year —
in the Machinery Fund — for vehicle purchases. The current funding,
which is nearing $150,000 will allow the Eureka Department to
purchase a new ambulance. Then about every 15 to 18 months, the
other two departments — Libby and Troy — will alternate new
purchases as funds accrue.
“It’s not quite (that) each department
gets a new ambulance every six years, more like every five-(plus),”
Wernham.
For 2010-’12, the budget was $264,582.
For fiscal year 2011-’12, the Ambulance Fund showed $390,399 or
about 47 percent more, of which the increase included dollars from
the Machinery Fund.
After the Eureka purchase this year,
Libby Volunteer Ambulance will be next.
“Troy purchased a new ambulance about
two years ago,” said Lincoln County Clerk Tammy Lauer. “Libby will
get the next ambulance.”
The Troy ambulance cost about $138,000,
Lauer said.
According to the funding breakdown,
Lauer said both Troy and Eureka receive about 30 percent of the
annual Ambulance Fund budget, and, until just years ago, Libby was
getting 40 percent. However, with the blessing of Lincoln County
Commissioners, the LVA agreed to give 6 percent of its funding to
the Fisher River Volunteer Ambulance Service.
Currently, Libby Volunteer Ambulance
has the largest fleet of five ambulances, the oldest being No. 10,
a 1994 model.
“I think we’re getting enough money
from the county,” Wernham said. “We pay for training, insurance and
it buys the ambulances.”
Both Wernham and Lauer agreed the
larger issue these days is getting people to volunteer for
ambulance service.
“The number of volunteers is just not
there like it was,” Lauer said. “We used to have considerably
more.”
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