ST. CLOUD — Voters here could see a question on the ballot this fall asking them to approve a tax increase for a new fire station on the city’s south side.
St. Cloud Mayor Dave Kleis on Tuesday announced plans for a referendum during his 19th annual State of the City address.
“Our firefighters go to fires, natural disasters, medical calls, dangerous rescues,” he said to a crowd of a few hundred people gathered at City Hall. “They need a little help in that response — they need another fire station.”
The city has five fire stations, one of which is at the airport and is only used to support airport operations.
St. Cloud Fire Chief Matt Love said Tuesday the city is working with a firm to design a new station and training facility on the south side of the city near the intersection of Hwy. 15 and 33rd Street S. — an area that’s seen recent growth with the new Tech High School, charter schools and growing residential neighborhoods.
Once costs are finalized, city leaders will ask the City Council to approve adding the question to the ballot this fall. It would likely be similar to a public safety referendum in 2006 that asked voters to allow the city to rebuild a fire station on the west side by the Municipal Athletic Complex and build a new fire station on the south side just north of I-94. The measure passed, with 57% voting yes to the tax increase.
The new station would improve response times across the entire city, Love said.
A 2020 study of the city’s fire department showed its response time exceeds nationally recommended standards for fires, emergency medical calls and other calls. The national benchmark is about 6 minutes, whereas St. Cloud’s average response time to a fire was 10 minutes, the study showed.