KWFD Wants New Boat.

Bobcat

Founding Member
Seems kind of expensive, surely there is a boat manufacturer in Florida that could produce a better boat?

Fire Dept. wants 29-foot, $287K boat
Money already in the 2013-14 budget to replace decade-old vessel
BY GWEN FILOSA Citizen Staff
gfilosa@keysnews.com
The City Commission on Tuesday will decide whether to buy the fire department a 29-foot metal-hulled boat for $287,000, including delivery, to replace its decade-old fiberglass Boston Whaler that firefighters say is past its prime.

"We're basically trying to keep it operational for now until we can the new one," said Michael Davila, Division Chief of Operations, of the 25-foot Whaler.

Commissioners have already allocated $290,000 for the new boat in the fiscal year 2013-2014 budget.

Delivery of the boat alone is estimated to cost $9,200, according to the 16-page quote drawn up by Safe Boat for the Key West Fire Department.

The boat, with a 250-gallon fuel tank that holds up to 17 people, starts at $122,000, with the trailer priced at $13,000 and the water pump system costs nearly $40,000.

"This isn't the cheapest but it's not the most expensive," said Davila. "The police department has a Safe Boat brand out in the harbor so we're familiar with the brand."

If approved Tuesday, the fire department expects to wait six to eight months before the T-Top boat with twin Mercury 300-horsepower outboard engines is delivered on a flat-bed truck by Safe Boat International, of Port Orchard, Wash.

Key West firefighters used their old boat a week ago to drown out an early morning houseboat fire off North Roosevelt Boulevard.

"We attacked it from both Hilton Haven Drive, which isn't much of an attack point, and from the Whaler," said Davila. "We use it probably a dozen times a year, primarily for medical transports. We use the fire boat to take our ambulance crews over to Sunset Key to pick up people or people on liveaboards."

Always kept in the water, the fire boat is docked at Garrison Bight, near the Harborside Motel on Eisenhower Drive. But it's home is directly across from 1600 N. Roosevelt Blvd. Firefighters moved it when the state reconstruction project began but Davila said they're close to returning the Whaler back to New Town.

The water pump drafts directly from under the boat where the mounted pump inside pulls in seawater. Spraying power can run as long as the fuel lasts.

"We have a wide range of missions for this boat and that's why we're going with Safe Boat brand," said Davila. "It's kind of a heavy boat because it's a metal hull, which is more costly upfront, but for the life of the unit it will save money because you won't have to replace it as often."

Safe Boat makes boats for the military along with police and rescue departments. Its fleet includes boats called "The Apostle," "The Defender" and "The Archangel."

The one Key West firefighters picked out after assembling a committee to study options and interview company representatives, is listed as a T-Top boat without a Top Gun-style name.

But it is a solid boat that will serve the island well, said Davila, a 27-year veteran of the fire department.

"The mission for this boat will of course be fire, but also medical rescue and a dive team will be assigned to it," Davila said. "We have a wide range of missions for this boat and that's what we're going with Safe Boat brand."

The commission meets at 6 p.m. Tuesday at Old City Hall, 510 Greene St.

City Commissioner Billy Wardlow, a retired fire chief, said Friday he expects the Safe Boat purchase to go through on Tuesday.

"It's like insurance," Wardlow said of having a fire boat on hand. "Every 10 years you turn over your equipment. It's paid for out of the gas tax, the capital fund, not from property taxes."

Key West didn't have its first fire boat until Sunset Key was developed into an upscale resort and neighborhood in the late 1990s. The city required developers to provide a fire boat and they did.

"Every week, fire or not, they go out to the island and check the equipment, because they have a truck there, too," said Wardlow.

gfilosa@keysnews.com
 
A ten year old Boston Whaler should be a decent boat still? Why not just refit it?
 
With all the boat builders in Fl. they're going to Washington State? It sounds like normal government mentality.
 
Also Tuesday night,

the commission:

• Approved 7-0 the purchase of a $287,000, 29-foot, metal-hulled fireboat with twin 300-horsepower outboard engines from Safe Boats International to replace the Fire Department's 2003 Boston Whaler. The approval authorizes spending up to $289,964. Delivery from the Washington state company costs $9,200.

Several commissioners took time to point out that while the price could appear staggering to some, the fireboat is a necessary piece of equipment for an island comprising residents living near and on the water.

"The Fire Department has great justification," said City Commissioner Teri Johnston. "Most of the uses are not for fires. Medical emergencies are far more prevalent."

Between Oct. 1, 2012, and Sept. 20, 2013, the fireboat was called to 19 incidents: 15 medical, three fires and one port security request, according to city spokeswoman Alyson Crean, responding to The Citizen's request for information.

The boat had 140 training missions during the same period, Crean said. The fire calls were in response to one fire on Sunset Key, one on Wisteria Island and one boat fire in the harbor.
 
$9200 for delivery seems a bit steep for a 29' boat. Must be using government employees.....
 
390 Nor-Tech is a 10' beam and people tow them everywhere with no problems. 7000 mile round-trip, use about 700 gallons of diesel = $2800, leaves $6400 for the driver of the rig? I don't think they put it out for competitive bids based on what I've gotten quoted in the past. Maybe stuff has gone up that much, but I would think that's pretty steep.

Is the boat coming with a trailer?
 
7200 mile round trip. $1.27 a mile.
120 hours of driving. Two week turn around.
Let's say 9 mpg average, inluding idling.

800 gallons of diesel at $4.00 is $3,200.00
Leaves $6,000. Take off $1,000 for wear and tear, tire wear and oil change.
Two hundred for tolls.
50 bucks a day per diem for food would be $700.00
Let's say that the driver likes to sleep in a bed and take a shower, $1,400.00.

You only pay your driver $22.50 an hour while driving. He has to gas up off the clock.

You cheap bastard.
 
Two week turn around? What are you doing, spending a week, and some of your exorbitant charges, at Disneyland with an expensive Princess for hire in the castle? Geez, they just drove from New York to Southern California in like 26 hours, just over 1 day!
 
Most trucks dead head out of the Keys....meaning no cargo on the return trip....we only export trash.
 
I'm thinking a drive down with a boat like that on a flatbed would take 50 hours of drive time total down, pick up some oranges in Indian River on the way back and you're golden at about half the quoted price. Do it with a husband wife longhaul team and they're back home in a few days.
 
Back
Top