By Rod Hansen
Staff Writer
After
a three-year tenure often plagued by controversy, Goffstown Fire Chief
Frank Carpentino announced his retirement to selectmen on Monday, Oct.
23. Carpentino said he will work until the end of this year.
Although Carpentino gave no official reason for his departure,
some colleagues said it may have resulted from his tumultuous tenure as
the town’s top firefighter.
Selectmen said he’ll enter the state retirement system.
“He’d taken his beatings, and it was starting to take a toll on
him physically,” said Deputy Fire Chief Mark Hurley in a telephone
interview.
“We’ve just started the budget process, and right away
(selectmen) take $500,000 out of his CIP budget. That’s got to have an
effect,” Hurley said.
Hurley’s comments referred to recent budget deliberations in
which selectmen recommended cutting some fire department vehicles and a
fire facilities study from the town’s Capital Improvements Program.
Carpentino was not present during those discussions.
Carpentino, 47, came to the Goffstown Fire Department as chief
in August 2003 from the Hudson Fire Department, where he’d also held
the top spot.
The chief was the subject of a recent controversy when e-mails
became public in which he complained about his department’s inability
to provide mutual aid to neighboring towns.
In one of those messages, labeled “Disgrace,” Carpentino spoke
of how the town was unable to meet a mutual aid request from Bedford
and relied exclusively on other departments to answer one of its own
alarms.
“Both of these incidents did nothing more than disgrace the
department and tarnish its reputation,” Carpentino wrote in the e-mail,
dated July 18, and sent to various members of the fire department and
Nick Campasano, the department’s representative to the board of
selectmen.
In a second e-mail sent 10 days later, Carpentino said he was
“sad and embarrassed” to inform five neighboring fire departments that
Goffstown would have no fire or EMS coverage the upcoming weekend and
would rely solely on mutual aid for fire coverage.
Selectmen have since adopted a policy directing Carpentino to
staff the stations with full-time firefighters as well as call force on
weekends if necessary.
Carpentino also sat at the center of a firestorm of dispute
when selectmen voted to eliminate his position last November and
consolidate the town’s fire, police and EMS departments under the
umbrella of a public safety department.
A Hillsborough County Superior Court judge later ruled that
voters had to approve such a move, and a Town Meeting vote of 2,350-792
swept Carpentino back into the chief’s position in March of this year.
Campasano said Carpentino has offered no recommendations for a
replacement, and selectmen have not discussed how they will advertise
or recruit for that position.
“That’s something we’ll have to discuss at our next meeting,” he said.
The position paid Carpentino $74,000 per year.
Hurley spoke highly of Carpentino on the day following the
announcement of the chief’s retirement, praising his efforts to answer
a town request for around-the-clock fire coverage.
“When they asked him for a 24/7 report, they gave him 30 days
to do it,” Hurley said of the request selectmen made in the summer of
2004. “That’s a really short time frame to give a good report. He
worked nights and weekends, and turned in a 100-plus page report.”
“I’m happy for him that he’ll be relieved from the duties of
being a fire chief after he worked so hard for this town,” Hurley said.