SUPPORTS ITEM NO. 4 P & E COMMITTEE AGENDA MARCH 14, 1996 ADMINISTRATIVE REPORT Date: March 6, 1996 TO: Standing Committee on Planning & Environment FROM: General Manager of Fire & Rescue Services SUBJECT: Vancouver Fire/Rescue Services - Application for B.C. 21 Grant RECOMMENDATIONS A. THAT Council authorize additional funding of $770,000 for the development of the Vancouver Fire and Rescue Services Training Centre, for a total budget of $3 million assuming receipt of a grant for $1 million for the B.C. 21 Community Projects Program; source of funds to be an advance from Revenue Surplus, to be repaid from the Fire Protection section of the 1997-1999 Capital Plan. B. THAT Council approve the 1996 allocation of $160,000 from the 1993-1996 Capital Plan for the training site, in advance of the 1996 Basic Capital Budget. C. THAT Council authorize application for a grant of $1,000,000 under the Provincial B.C. 21 Community Projects Program to assist in development of the Vancouver Fire and Rescue Services Training Centre at the revised budget of $3,000,000. D. THAT Council authorize the General Manager of Fire and Rescue Services and the Director of Legal Services to execute all necessary and ancillary documents and agreements in connection with making application for, and if successful, taking receipt of the grant funds. E. THAT expenditure of the additional funds authorized in this report be conditional upon receipt of $1 million from the B.C. 21 program. GENERAL MANAGER'S COMMENTS The General Manager of Fire and Rescue Services notes that competency training to certifiable standards that will be available through the new training facility has been a high priority of the Department's strategic plan and follows the recommendations of the Citizens Advisory Committee. Council has already given approval for construction of the site. Authorizing additional funds now for the full project will allow the City to make application for provincial money under B.C. 21 Community Projects Program. The General Manager also notes that the Fire Training Site is not the department's first priority for capital funding from the 1997- 1999 Capital Plan. However, given the opportunity to access provincial cost sharing for this project and the expectation that some level of City funding would be approved in the next capital plan, it is sensible to advance the project at this time, and the General Manager RECOMMENDS approval of the foregoing. COUNCIL POLICY The City plans its capital expenditures over a three year period which - 2 - coincides with the term of Council. The 1996 Capital Budget, to be considered by Council in early May, 1996, will complete the 1994-1996 Capital Plan. Development of the 1997-1999 Capital Plan will take place over the next six months leading to borrowing requirements being put to plebiscite in conjunction with the November civic election. The Vancouver Charter requires that expenditures approved by Council be fully funded. In situations where project funding is anticipated in a subsequent Capital Plan, Council has approved interim funding from Revenue Surplus. Council has approved a number of projects where funding grants and assistance are obtained from other levels of government: - on January 25, 1995, Council approved the development of a Urban Search and Heavy Rescue Team contingent on receiving funds from the Federal Joint Emergency Preparedness Program; - on May 3, 1995, Council approved participation in Industry funded W.C.B. Technical High Angle Rope Rescue Program. Training, purchasing of equipment and formation of teams is currently being undertaken by Vancouver Fire and Rescue Services; - on June 18, 1993, Council approved a partnership with VanCity Credit Union for funding assistance in the purchase of automatic electronic defibrillators for use with cardiac emergencies. PURPOSE The purpose of this report is to seek Council approval for an application to the B.C. 21 Community Projects Grant Program for a grant to assist in construction of the Vancouver Fire and Rescue Services Training Site. In order to support the grant application, Council is also requested to approve additional funding for the Training site in advance of the 1997-1999 Capital Plan. BACKGROUND The 1994-1996 Capital Plan includes $5,650,000 for fire protection purposes including provision of new or replacement communications, training facilities and firehalls. Of that amount, $1,230,000 was approved for Phase I of a new fire training site (see Appendix D). In August, 1994, Council approved the relocation of the fire training site from the south foot of Main Street to the east end of the Burlington Northern property that had been purchased for relocation of the Cambie Yard and for park purposes. The location is indicated in Appendix A. The funding in the 1994-1996 Capital Plan provided for only the first phase of the new fire training site. Vancouver Fire and Rescue Services intends to request funding for phase II of the project from the 1997- 1999 Capital Plan now under development. Including the cost of the land, the phase I and II costs of the facility are estimated in the range of $5.5 million. Phase III of the training site will be a permanent classroom building. At present, the Fire Department has installed a temporary training building on the west side of Chess Street, property intended to be used for an Engineering works yard, replacing Cambie Yards. Construction of this building will be a joint initiative of Engineering and Fire, perhaps with the participation of Park Board which has its works yard on adjacent property. It is not expected to be a priority in the next capital plan. - 3 - In the 1994 and 1995 Capital Budgets, Council approved most of the funding for design and phase I construction of the training site. The balance of the funding is to be included in the 1996 Capital Budget. A project team was created and development permits approved. PBK Engineering Limited was hired to design and oversee construction of the site. Construction will begin in May, 1996 with completion of phase I scheduled for the end of 1996. DISCUSSION Subject to approval in the next Capital Plan, phase II of the training site project was to include construction of additional training props. Appendices B and C presents a budget and description of this work and a site plan is included as Appendix D. When completed, the site will meet current training needs of the fire department by providing a unique training field on 2.2 acres, designed to simulate a wide variety of emergency situations typical of commercial, industrial and residential properties. Appendix E gives a comparison of training acreage utilized in a number of North American Fire Services, with our proposed site certainly falling within the lower levels of the range. The average site comprises 10.3 acres. The overall intent is to provide Fire and Rescue Staff the means to develop and maintain critical skills essential to the safe delivery of life safety services to certified standards. In areas of skills maintenance a scenario based training and assessment process will be used. The centre will also provide the required facilities for: - specialized teams (Haz-Mat, Heavy Urban Search and Rescue, Technical Rope Rescue) maintenance training; - certification of emergency vehicle operators and auto extrication instructors along with appropriate staff training; - development of a Trench Rescue Training Program along with a pilot program to certify technical rescue staff; - training of Heavy Urban Search and Rescue Non-Fire Team Members in Hazardous Material Awareness; - programs to certify and re-certify suppression staff in Emergency Medical Response Level III along with competency assessments for all Automatic External Defibrillator staff; - programs to certify suppression rescue staff to Confined Space Rescue Technicians; - training programs for Emergency Response Teams; - Officer and Command Officer Training along with ongoing training of the Battalion Chiefs in Incident Management; and - training and certification of Senior Firefighters to Company Officer. Provision of training facilities for a large City Fire Department such as Vancouver, necessarily requires a development which will have some unused capacity. This provides opportunities in four areas: - Many city agencies and programs, including the Neighbourhood Emergency Training Program and the Heavy Urban Search and Rescue Team, will be able to take advantage of the facilities at the training site. It is intended that Police, Fire, Engineering and Community Teams will participate in joint emergency exercises to improve the City's response to real incidents. - 4 - - Use by other Fire Services and Provincial training agencies such as the Provincial Emergency Program and the B.C. Fire Academy. Access to the site by these groups for training purposes will improve the overall emergency response in the community and allow the operating costs of the training site to be shared for specific courses where we have excess capacity. - Use by Vancouver City Police for a portion of their ongoing training needs. - Use by private industry on a cost recovery basis. The City will be pro-active in providing a first class, professionally managed training site, which will address City needs and will assist in forming strategic alliances with other emergency service agencies and industry to reduce our costs. The result will be a better quality of training for City staff and better communications and coordinated service delivery in emergency response situations involving agencies outside the City. B.C. 21 GRANT APPLICATION Broader access to the training site would also make the development eligible to be considered for cost sharing under the B.C. 21 Community Projects Program which was created by the Province to assist local government and non-profit organizations in investing in the future of their communities. Grants of up to one-third of total project costs to a maximum of $1,000,000 are available through the program. Provincial government staff and elected officials were receptive to a City application for cost sharing for the training site. A grant application provides an opportunity for the City to access provincial capital funding thereby reducing the municipal contribution otherwise required for the next phase of the training site. We are pursuing a rapid time line as the first phase of construction on the site is scheduled to start in May 1996, and construction cannot begin until they are in receipt of our application. FINANCIAL IMPLICATIONS Appendices B through C describe a training facility project with a cost estimated at $2,986,000, together with contingency of $14,000 rounded to $3,000,000. This excludes the cost of purchasing the site on Chess Street at a cost of approximately $2.5 million, which will be rented from the Property Endowment Fund until funds can be provided for its purchase through a future capital plan. The Fire Department currently has $1.07 million available for construction of the training site. Funding of $160,000 is scheduled in the 1996 Capital Budget, bringing the total available funds to $1,230,000. This report seeks conditional approval for additional City funding of $777,000 in order to forward the B.C. 21 grant application for $1 million. Expenditure of the additional funding would be conditional on the approval of the grant application. If the City is successful, the B.C. 21 grant funding for the training site would be as follows: 1994-1996 Capital Plan allocated $1,070,000 1996 provision 160,000 Additional City funding 770,000 B.C. 21 Program 1,000,000 Total $3,000,000 Should Council support the request for additional funding, the following actions are recommended: - 5 - - Council approval of the 1996 allocation in advance of the Basic Capital Budget, ($160,000). - an advance from Revenue Surplus to be repaid from the proceeds of the grant ($1,000,000) and from the 1997-199 Capital Plan ($770,000). A funding request for phase II would normally have been submitted for consideration in the 1997-1999 Capital Plan review process, along with other requests from Fire Services and requests from other departments. In advance of a complete review of capital submissions, there is no certainty that this project would be considered of sufficient priority to have been included in the Plan that will be recommended to Council in September. However, the opportunity to obtain Provincial funding justifies advancing the project now. CONCLUSION Vancouver Fire and Rescue Services is currently in the process of developing a new training facility. When completed, the training site will provide emergency response training opportunities for City staff as well as for staff from other fire services, emergency organizations and industry. To assist the City with the financing of this endeavour, Council's permission is being sought to make an application for a grant under the B.C. 21 Community Projects Program. In order for the grant application to go forward, additional City funding of $770,000 must be approved for the project. It is recommended that this funding be provided as an advance from Revenue Surplus to be repaid from the 1997- 1999 Capital Plan, and that the expenditure of the additional funds be conditional on approval of the B.C. 21 grant application. * * * * *