
Dunkel noted that the county's various fire department have varied equipment, some close to 50 years old. Having a piece of standard equipment would increase firemen to work effectively when several departments respond to a fire.
The sheriff's office is understaffed, he said. There aren't enough deputies for 24 hour coverage, and there aren't enough communications officers to cover all hours without overtime.
The county has an emergency management plan, he said, but the sheriff has no staff to oversee the plan, its updates, and its operation.
Sheriff Dan Bardsley and two fire chiefs, Dan. W. Cothren of District 4 and Scott Kehrli of Puget Island, said they agreed with Dunkel's conclusions.
"We've talked about this for many years," Cothren said. "It's great to have a document that lays it out."
Peter Hackett, Bradwood Landing observer, also commented favorably on the plan. "It lays out what needs to be done," he said.
Commissioners Dan Cothren (the chief's father), Blair Brady and Lisa Marsyla seemed to share an opinion expressed by some members of the audience: NorthernStar should cover the cost of the improvements.
"If LNG is going to go in, they should pay for the costs related to our costs to address their needs," Commissioner Cothren said.
"We agree with that to a very high degree," Dunkle commented. "We think it's important to them, that wherever they put a plant, that they have reliable services."
He added that the report does recommend improvements for departments just to meet their existing service needs, and this cost is not a responsibility of the plant operator.
Commissioner Brady pointed out a problem: Bradwood Landing would be in Oregon, and Wahkiakum County doesn't collect taxes there.
In response to questions from Puget Island residents, Dunkel said the report was based on reponse needed to address a catastrophic event. Local firemen wouldn't be going to Oregon to fight a fire, and they wouldn't be boarding ships, unless they were grounded or docked. They would be handling needs in their service areas. A key, he said, is having an early notification connection with the plan operators.
In response to requests from Island residents, commissioners said they would schedule a community meeting on the report.
Dunkel said he would mail some paper copies to the foundation, and these would be passed to the county. Also, a digital version will be linked to the county's website.