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<br />Mr. Mendoza said that he lost a sister few years ago in another community who was <br />shot and the house set on fire and they never received any support, but noted that they <br />did get support for their daughter in Redwood City. He thanked the Fire Department for <br />its su pport. <br /> <br />Chris Kehr said he is a longtime resident and fire fighter and paramedic in Redwood <br />City. He spoke about how the proposed budget 9uts would affect him and raising a <br />family here. He spoke in favor of the Fire Department and how fire fighters save lives <br />and help people at the worst possible times in their lives. He provided specific <br />scenarios of how the timeliness of calls makes a difference and noted that about 700/0 <br />of their calls are medical. <br /> <br />Mike Putterman spoke about becoming "flat lined" at Pacific Athletic Club for about four <br />to six minutes and that the Fire Department brought him back to life. He spoke in favor <br />of the Fire Department and noted that four to six minutes is crucial when saving lives. <br /> <br />Michelle Portz said that three years ago her daughter was hit by car and sustained <br />multiple life-threatening injuries, and if not for the Fire crew, she would not be here <br />today. She said the Fire Department was amazing and helped with fund raisers to help <br />support them. She asked that the Fire Department not be cut. <br /> <br />Janet Borgens said that Fire Stations 9 and 10 are statistically the two busiest in San <br />Mateo County. She spoke against a linear cut across the board. She would like the <br />Fire Department to be kept at the current staffing level and expressed appreciation to <br />all the Department Heads for the proposed cuts they provided. <br /> <br />Adrian Anderson, president of the Redwood City Firefighters Association for about 18 <br />years, (with time ceded from Rick Franchi, Costa Papas, Wade Greene, and Justin <br />Velasquez) said that they have done far more with far less than anyone else. He said <br />their staffing has gone down and their call volumes have doubled. He spoke about the <br />number of paramedics on a rig, pay freezes, pension reform system, partial payment of <br />medical coverage, reduced truck staffing, training, consolidated dispatch, being fined if <br />their response time exceeds a certain maximum, and safety issues. He said that they <br />do not have any additional people to cut and that they do not have any hidden staffing <br />issues. He said it is cheaper to pay overtime than to pay more employees and more <br />benefits. He questioned encouraging people to come downtown versus reducing their <br />fire protection and said that citizens will pay a high price. He opined that the right thing <br />to do is to keep stations open. <br /> <br />Council Direction <br />One Council Member pointed out what he sees as issues: 1) the great altruistic work <br />the Fire Department does 2) the staffing levels needed to maintain certain response <br />levels. This Council Member is concerned with lowering response levels. One Council <br />Member explained that the math to cut is not easy because now it is getting to the bone <br />of the organization. This Council Member explained that a long structural problem <br />needs to be addressed. Vice Mayor Aguirre is ready to accept the budget that was <br />proposed by the Chief. Another Council Member felt this is very hard but this needs to <br /> <br />SPECIAL JOINT CITY COUNCIL/REDEVELOPMENT AGENCY BOARD <br />MEETING MINUTES <br /> <br />June 21,2010 <br />PAGE 7 <br />