Sudbury volunteer firefighters union say no warning given on fire hall merger
As part of this year's budget deliberations, city council in Greater Sudbury voted to merge several fire stations, but the news is not sitting well with the union representing volunteer firefighters.
On Monday, during its first meeting to deliberate the 2025 municipal budget, council voted to merge three fire stations.
Copper Cliff will merge with Lively, Val Caron will join Val Therese and Falconbridge will combine with Garson.
The move is expected to save the city $73,833 annually.
'Not a service cut'
Coun. René Lapierre is adamant it is not a service cut.
"It’s a change in where they’re responding from," he explained to his fellow councillors.
"The same amount of people will be responding to calls, the trucks as well. They’ll be able to respond to the calls. They’re just changing the location as to where they’re responding from."
Matt Walchuk, a provincial representative with the Christian Labour Association of Canada (CLAC), disagrees.
"There is definitely a reduction of service and it’s going to come at a higher price for the members of the community," Walchuk said.
"Look at the insurance rates that we suspect may very well likely increase when you’re that much further from a fire station. What are the impacts, the implications there? These are things the community should have been made aware of."
Twenty volunteer firefighters will be impacted; seven volunteers at Copper Cliff, two in Falconbridge and 11 at the Val Caron site.
They’ll join their counterparts at the merged fire halls.
Coun. Eric Benoit said he suspects some of them will stop volunteering as a result.
"Some may move over, but I’ve heard from a lot that they won’t because now they have to travel an extended distance to get to the station," Benoit said.
"A lot of these stations don’t have the capacity for these volunteers to move there."
Walchuk said the city made the decision without warning or public engagement.
"It’s a really difficult situation that should have been brought to our attention for all of these reasons as the members and the union should have been able to speak to this decision prior to it being made and we simply weren’t," Walchuk said.
The three fire halls slated for closure are expected to be shuttered by Christmas.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
LIVE @ 4:30 P.M. PT Downtown Vancouver stabbing suspect dead after being shot by police
A suspect is dead after being shot by police in a Vancouver convenience store after two people were injured in a stabbing Wednesday morning, according to authorities.
DEVELOPING As police search for suspect, disturbing video surfaces after U.S. health-care CEO gunned down in New York
UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson was killed Wednesday morning in what investigators suspect was a targeted shooting outside a Manhattan hotel where the health insurer was holding an investor conference.
'Utterly absurd': Freeland rebuffs Poilievre's offer of two hours to present fall economic statement
Deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland has rebuffed Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre's offer to give up two hours of scheduled opposition time next Monday to present the awaited fall economic statement as 'utterly absurd.'
Transport Minister to summon airline CEOs as Air Canada set to charge carry-on fees for some passengers
Transport Minister Anita Anand says she will be calling Canadian airline CEOs to a meeting in mid-December after Air Canada says it will charge some passengers for carry-on bags in the new year.
Canada's new public-sector payment system is still years away from being implemented
After half a decade of testing and an investment of nearly $300 million, the federal government is still years away from fully implementing its next-generation pay and human resource cloud platform to replace the problem-plagued Phoenix payroll system.
WATCH: Suspects armed with hammers hit Markham jewelry store
Six suspects are in custody in connection with a smash-and-grab robbery at a jewelry store in a Markham mall that was captured on video.
Why are some Canada Post outlets still open during CUPW strike?
As many postal workers continue to strike across the country, some Canadians have been puzzled by the fact some Canada Post offices and retail outlets remain open.
French government toppled in historic no-confidence vote
French opposition lawmakers brought the government down on Wednesday, throwing the European Union's second-biggest economic power deeper into a political crisis that threatens its capacity to legislate and rein in a massive budget deficit.
Woman who stowed away on plane to Paris is back on U.S. soil
A Russian woman who stowed away on a Delta Air Line flight from New York to Paris last week has returned stateside Wednesday.