ADVERTISEMENTspot_img

Popular All Time

ADVERTISEMENTspot_img
spot_img
Boiler Bay Beacon logo Boiler Bay Beacon
Stay connected with local Lincoln County news
HomeNewsFIRE DISTRICTS DEDICATE NEW HEADQUARTERS IN EDDYVILLE

FIRE DISTRICTS DEDICATE NEW HEADQUARTERS IN EDDYVILLE

$4.5 million facility includes four bays, sleeping quarters and community room

EDDYVILLE, Ore. — Approximately 120 residents, firefighters and local officials attended the open house and ribbon-cutting Saturday at the new East Lincoln Fire District Headquarters on Nashville Road.

Notable attendees included state Rep. David Gomberg, who championed the project’s funding through Oregon Lottery bonds, an Oregon State Police representative and members of the Blodgett Fire Department.

Gomberg
State Rep. David Gomberg cuts the ribbon Saturday during the dedication of the new East Lincoln Fire District Headquarters in Eddyville.

The $4.5 million, 10,000-square-foot building includes four apparatus bays, four bedrooms for volunteer firefighters, a full kitchen and lounge, a 25,000-gallon fire suppression system, solar panels, sun tubes for natural lighting, an electric vehicle charging station and a training room that doubles as a community space. The room is open to the public and available for weddings, meetings, town halls and other community gatherings.

“During construction of the station a parallel project was to build a full-service fire agency,” said Will Ewing, chief of the Seal Rock and East Lincoln fire districts. “It came to fruition at about the same time. I’d say we did a pretty good job of that.”

Thirty volunteers from the Seal Rock and East Lincoln fire districts helped staff the event. Four additional volunteers signed up to join the districts during the gathering.

County Commissioner hopeful Joe Steere also attended the dedication.

Joe Steere
County Commissioner hopeful Joe Steere attends the dedication of the new East Lincoln Fire District Headquarters in Eddyville on Saturday.

The station, funded largely by Oregon Lottery bonds authorized in 2021 plus grants and donations including $20,000 from Starker Forests, is expected to cut emergency response times by roughly 25 minutes along the Highway 20 corridor and improve wildfire protection across the 55-square-mile district, which is more than 90 percent timberland.

Operations are slated to begin in early May, with a full public opening set for July 4.

spot_img
Justin Werner
Justin Wernerhttps://boilerbaybeacon.com
A dedicated advocate for ethical, independent reporting on the Oregon Coast, Werner continues to raise the bar for local journalism through relentless curiosity, technical expertise, and an unwavering commitment to truth.

BEACON +

Keep local journalism alive and independent. Subscribe for ad-free access, dark mode, personalized stories, and help fund a future community newspaper.

SUBSCRIBE

COMMENTS

LEAVE A COMMENT

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Related News

ADVERTISEMENTspot_img
ADVERTISEMENTspot_img
ADVERTISEMENTspot_img

SemperVigilantes