BY
STEPHEN BEALE
The town has hired a firm to design a new
fire station, recommend where it
would be best to build it and help
officials educate voters about the
project, if they choose to follow
through with it.
That decision on the design
was made by the Board of Selectmen
at its weekly meeting Monday,
May 12. The board also
approved a new chaplain position
for the Fire Department,
discussed what to do about traffic
delays at one of the town polling
places and weighed possible
changes to fees and fines.
Fire Chief Richard O’Brien
said the three existing, aging
fire stations in town could not
accommodate 24-hour, all-week
fire service, are too small for
some fire vehicles and do not
have the capabilities of some
modern facilities, such as the
ability to decontaminate equipment.
In the process of designing
a new station, the fire chief said
the department will also look at
ways it can be more efficient.
The firm, Kaestle Boos Associates
Inc. of Portsmouth, will be
doing the engineering and architectural
design for the town, at a
cost of about $24,700. The firm
will work on the design of the
new station as well as pinpoint
possible locations. The design
will be completed by November,
according to O’Brien.
The board also told O’Brien
that he could establish a volunteer
chaplain position for the
Fire Department. He said his
department will search for a
chaplain within its ranks, but
could also tap a local minister.
The chaplain would help
the department and community
deal with a firefighter who had
been injured or killed in the line
of duty. He would be spearheading
a new comprehensive program
for notifying the families
of those firefighters and helping
them deal with the aftermath.
The chaplain, who must be
an ordained clergyman, would
be on hand at the scene of an
incident and would also be
expected to visit a firefighter
in the hospital, according to a
three-page job description. On a
routine basis, he would visit fire
stations, attend Fire Department
events, such as funerals, and be
on call 24 hours a day.
“This position, I feel, is very
needed in every department
across the nation, and Goffstown
is no exception,” O’Brien
said.
The Police Department also
has a chaplain position, which is
vacant. O’Brien said he modeled
the Fire Department position
after the police counterpart, in
addition to national standards.
Nick Campasano, chairman of
the Board of Selectmen, said
applicants for fire chaplain
should be asked if they could
be available for police, until that
department fills its own position.
Other business
The owner of four properties
between Depot Street and the
Piscataquog River in Goffstown
Village asked that the land be
included in the area the town is
asking the state to exempt from
the Shoreland Protection Act,
which imposes some restrictions
on development within 250 feet
of water.
Maurice Blondeau, who
shares ownership of the properties
with his family, noted that
the exemptions had stopped at
his property line.
“I think it’s unfair,” Blondeau
said. “Whoever they’re looking
out for, it wasn’t with us in mind.
I think it’s a blatant oversight.”
His mother, Vivian Blondeau,
is a selectman. After recusing
herself as a town official from
the discussion, she urged the
board to consider expanding the
exemption, since the property is
zoned for commercial or industrial
use. She said it was the
largest property zoned for that
use in that part of town.
Campasano warned that
approving the request would
trigger even more from other
property owners. Selectman
Phil D’Avanza, on the other
hand, said that he did not want
to create any more obstacles
for industrial development. The
board deferred a decision to its
May 19 meeting.
The selectmen also discussed
what to do about traffic delays
during the presidential primary
at the Goffstown High School
polling place. Town Moderator
Rodney Stark said he received a
letter from an assistant attorney
general saying that some voters
had to wait an hour or more to
park their cars before voting.
The official said that was
a violation of a state rule that
voters should not have to wait
longer than 10 minutes.
Stark said he thought that
rule applied to the time voters
spent waiting in line inside the
polling place.
Selectmen aired several possible
ways they could alleviate
the situation in time for the September
state primary and the
November general election.
One included adding more
police — an idea which was welcomed
by Stark.
“I don’t think there’s any
question, I’ve always thought we
needed more police, but they
haven’t been allotted,” Stark
said.
He added that he has not
actively been pushing for more
police.