Resident says Hartford should consider smaller medic vehicles to reduce hook‑and‑ladder costs
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A public commenter told the council that Hartford's long‑standing practice of sending large hook‑and‑ladder trucks to many 911 calls wastes money and shortens apparatus life, and urged the city to consider smaller four‑wheel‑drive or medic vehicles used by neighboring towns as an alternative.
Bill Katz argued during public comment that Hartford routinely dispatches large hook‑and‑ladder trucks to 911 calls even when smaller rescue or medic vehicles would suffice, driving up replacement costs and equipment wear. "Hook and ladders brand new hook and ladders cost anywhere from a half a million to $2,000,000 to replace," Katz said, and he said those rigs, when used continuously, may be good for only about 10–15 years.
Katz said West Hartford uses two small vehicles and medics for some calls and suggested Hartford adopt smaller four‑wheel‑drive units that could navigate winter storms and perform many 911 responses more cheaply. "We're wasting millions of dollars," he said, and asked the council to consider a plan to acquire compact response vehicles rather than repeatedly replacing large apparatus.
The council did not take formal action during public comment. Katz's remarks raise budget and operational questions the council may direct staff or the fire department to examine.
