Trending Topics

Atlanta officials invest nearly $18M in new fire apparatus

Three desperately needed ladder trucks are among 11 new rigs to be purchased after an audit found firefighters had no reserve apparatus and sometimes relied on pickup trucks

US-NEWS-ATLANTA-MAKES-18M-INVESTMENT-NEW-1-AT.jpg

The Atlanta Fire Rescue Department is grappling with a pervasive equipment shortage driven by out-of-date vehicles and slow purchasing timelines. The City Auditor’s Office is conducting an audit of fleet maintenance in an effort to better mitigate the issue going forward.

Riley Bunch/TNS

By Riley Bunch
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

ATLANTA — Atlanta is working to quickly bolster its fire fleet after years of problems with out-of-service trucks after a startling audit that found one-third of the city’s fire fleet is beyond its life cycle.

Atlanta City Council members approved the nearly $18 million purchase of 11 new vehicles — including three desperately needed ladder trucks — on Monday as part of an ongoing effort to address the fire department’s dire equipment shortage.


Officials plan to increase the number of reserve fire apparatus, add more rapid response units and purchase more apparatus in the next fiscal year

Elected officials began sounding the alarm last year, when a series of severe fires across the city highlighted the truck issues, which council members say are far from being resolved.

The audit found that on a typical day in 2022 or 2023, anywhere from two to 20 engines and ladder trucks were out of commission due to mechanical issues, and stations were sharing trucks to accommodate needs across the city.

Council member Dustin Hillis, former chair of the public safety committee, told The Atlanta Journal-Constitution that the city was operating with little to no reserve trucks available in case of breakdowns.

At the height of the issues, he said, firefighters were responding to calls in pickup trucks.

“We are running around trying to respond to medical calls and fires with trucks that are upward of 20-plus years old and have 150,000-plus miles on them,” Hillis said.

The city is waiting on upward of 20 vehicles and trucks already ordered from manufacturers. But Atlanta Fire Chief Rod Smith told council members last week that it could take years to receive any of them.

“It’s a lengthy period, the major manufacturers right now are saying anywhere from 24 to 36 months from the time they actually receive the (order),” he said. “We’ve seen that time shortening recently, and so we’re hopeful that we can get them within 24 months.”

©2024 The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.
Visit at ajc.com.
Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Trending
John Tippet joined the NFFF after 44 years in the fire service, including serving as Charleston’s first deputy chief of operations following the tragic Sofa Super Store fire
A recent fire in Plainville is the fourth fatal fire in the month that involved smoking materials and home oxygen
Portland Fire Chief Ryan Gillespie will retire in early March
A head-on collision during a wrong-way pursuit on I-25 in 2022 claimed a Santa Fe officer and a retired Las Vegas firefighter