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The Darfur Fire Hall is a garage attached to City Hall. New sites are being considered.
Photo courtesy of Lisa Schumann / The Free Press


Mold is one of many problems at the Darfur Fire Hall that would be too expensive to repair. So the city has decided to build a new hall, getting $200,000 in loans and a $44,000 grant from the agriculture department to do so.
Photo courtesy of Lisa Schumann / The Free Press


Clearly, storage has been another issue with Darfur’s fire hall. The building is basically a garage, and the volunteer fire department is having trouble storing all its equipment there.
Photo courtesy of Lisa Schumann / The Free Press


Published September 22, 2009 10:47 pm -
Darfur and Lewisville are receiving federal stimulus money — roughly one part grant to four parts loan — to build new fire halls. The funding is being routed through the state rural development office, headed by Colleen Landkamer, a Mankato resident and former Blue Earth County commissioner.


Stimulus aids with new fire halls


By Dan Linehan
Free Press Staff Writer

On Feb. 28, Lewisville’s fire hall was damaged in a fire that destroyed a cabinetry business next door owned by Denny Jahnz, also the mayor and a volunteer firefighter.

On May 20, three more buildings were damaged in what authorities later called an arson.

The volunteer fire department didn’t fight these blazes alone, but lacked some equipment that might have helped. One problem: They don’t have enough space to store it. The fire hall is too small.

On the other side of Watonwan County, Darfur’s fire hall is more like a garage, really.

Water leaks through the roof and there’s mold growing on the walls and ceiling.

“It’s ridiculous to even think that it could be a fire hall anymore,” Mayor John Schumann said.

Both small towns are receiving federal stimulus money — roughly one part grant to four parts loan — to build new fire halls. The funding is being routed through the state rural development office, headed by Colleen Landkamer, a Mankato resident and former Blue Earth County commissioner.

“People that live and work in rural communities should be able to count on having fire and rescue services that meet modern standards,” she said in a news release.

Small towns and rural areas generally can’t afford full-time employees, so they rely on volunteers to get the job done. These small departments generally service their towns and the rural areas around them, in addition to aiding nearby cities during major fires.

These small local governments were spared the brunt of state aid cuts but still have trouble paying six-figure bills for new fire halls and equipment.

“It’s a very hard time to spend extra money,” said Dave Ganfield, secretary of the Minnesota State Volunteer Firefighters Association.

Federal money has helped these small departments to buy equipment, but the federal government recently rolled out a program specifically for fire halls. That program is run by FEMA and is totally separate from the grants and loans Darfur and Lewisville received.

Truman has applied for the FEMA loans, but Fire Chief Brian Nickerson is worried his City Council isn’t willing to incur the debt.

He said the council is being over-cautious about its budget.

“You have to have some vision for the future,” he said. ... “City councils do not realize what their fire departments do for them.”



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