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Public Safety

Committee To Review San Diego Fire-Rescue's Progress In Implementing Changes

San Diego Fire and Rescue Department Truck 10 sits in a fire station garage.
San Diego Fire and Rescue Department Truck 10 sits in a fire station garage.

A City Council committee meeting to discuss San Diego's progress in implementing 10 recommendations suggested in a consultant's review of the San Diego Fire-Rescue Department was canceled Wednesday due to a sick councilman.

With Councilman David Alvarez out, the Public Safety and Neighborhood Services Committee lacked a quorum. The next regularly scheduled meeting is scheduled for Feb. 13.

The city has instituted four of 10 recommendations and are in the process of implementing four others, according to a report that had been scheduled to go before the committee.

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The Northern California-based consulting group Citygate provided ideas for improving the fire department and helping it meet national standards for response times. A group of city officials was supposed to have made sure the recommendations were implemented over the past year.

The most important of the four recommendations completed was ending a "brownout'' policy that took eight engines out of service on a rotating basis to save money. The others were bureaucratic, such as adopting revised deployment measures and new population definitions, and deciding to use Citygate criteria for prioritizing resources.

Of the recommendations being implemented, according to the report:

-- the city is reviewing community plans to make sure they include funding for needed fire stations, and the city is revising fire station capital improvement projects;

-- a new dispatching process for medical emergencies has been adopted, which has reduced response times by 42 seconds; a grant request to have the dispatch process reviewed by outside experts, however, was unsuccessful;

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-- city officials are determining if there is any interest in sponsorships for the fire department's new fast-response squads; and

-- bids are still being accepted through Thursday for prospective contractors on a $4.3 million fire station emergency alert system, which would replace broken down equipment.

The two recommendations that have not been fulfilled are funding for a fire truck in east Mission Valley and designing a new station on Home Avenue -- both due to lack of funding. The SDFRD is proposing that both be carried over into the next fiscal year.

Most of the recommendations scheduled to be implemented in the second year include building, outfitting and staffing the east Mission Valley and Home Avenue stations.

KPBS has created a public safety coverage policy to guide decisions on what stories we prioritize, as well as whose narratives we need to include to tell complete stories that best serve our audiences. This policy was shaped through months of training with the Poynter Institute and feedback from the community. You can read the full policy here.