Fire station No. 7 opens it doors
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Mathis Winkler
SANTA ANA HEIGHTS -- More than three months after Newport Beach
firefighters moved into the city’s newest fire station, the guys in blue
finally came around Saturday to welcome neighbors to a housewarming
party.
Mingling with folks at Newport Beach fire station No. 7, Fire Chief
Tim Riley said he was glad the event turned out to be a success.
“We have a happening going on here,” he said as about 100 people
checked out fire engines and the station in the background. “They’ve
turned this into a neighborhood party.”
Capt. John Blauer, the department’s spokesman, added that the party
also gave firefighters a chance to learn about the area’s history.
“Normally it takes two or three years,” he said.
City officials decided to set up shop at Zenith Avenue and Orchid
Street after the Orange County Fire Authority’s fire station near John
Wayne Airport caught fire last December.
County firefighters were still responsible for the area, although
Newport Beach will likely annex Santa Ana Heights in the near future.
But noticing a drop in response time after county engines began
answering calls from an Irvine location, city officials decided to deal
with the matter right away.
In January, they stationed an engine at a hotel in the airport area
and began serving Santa Ana Heights as well.
City Council members then approved funding for a temporary station for
the neighborhood and firefighters moved into the trailer at the current
location in early April.
City Manager Homer Bludau, who stopped by the festivities, said he
believed setting up the fire station was the right thing to do.
“I salute the council to take that step,” he said, adding that at a
cost of about $1 million per year, the station takes a significant sum
out of city coffers a couple of years earlier than anticipated.
Santa Ana Heights residents said they are grateful that Newport Beach
is looking out for them.
“It’s great to have that protection,” said Jean Whitney, who has lived
in the equestrian neighborhood for about 40 years.
Sitting on a vintage fire engine, 6-year-old Lotte Martin said she’d
come to have fun.
The station “looks like a regular house,” she said, adding that she’s
considering becoming a firefighter, but still favors a career as a
dentist or doctor.
Her dad, Gary, added that the firefighters have been great neighbors
so far.
“They’re very quiet,” he said, adding that he was concerned at first
about possible siren noise since his family lives just three houses down
the road.
But “they’re pretty good about not turning [the sirens] on until the
get out of the area,” he said.
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