Laurel Hill Volunteer Fire Co. #6

Laurel Hill Volunteer Fire Co. #6 This page is the one and only official page of the Laurel Hill Fire Company Station 6. This page is to inform/show the public about the LHVFD.

06/10/2026
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASEJune 5, 2026Statement from Taftville, Laurel Hill, Occum, and Yantic Volunteer Fire Department Chie...
06/05/2026

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
June 5, 2026

Statement from Taftville, Laurel Hill, Occum, and Yantic Volunteer Fire Department Chiefs on City of Norwich’s Closure of the Taftville Fire Company and New CAD Dispatch System Changes to Eliminate Volunteer Fire Service in the City

Today, the City of Norwich, led by City Manager John Salomone and Fire Chief Samuel Wilson, closed the doors of the Taftville Fire Company after it had served the community for more than 109 years, adding further unnecessary costs to Norwich taxpayers as they work to eliminate volunteers across the City for not agreeing to Consolidated Command.

At around 10 a.m. this morning, Taftville Chief Timothy Jencks was served with a court order by State Marshals to immediately vacate the premises, including all property not owned by the city. The order also said the Taftville Fire Company shall not enter or occupy the premises without written authorization from the City.

Earlier in the morning, before the order was served, City Manager Salomone called Chief Jencks and asked why he was vacating the station, to which Chief Jencks responded that the court had ordered them to vacate. Following another call from City Manager Salomone questioning him, Chief Jencks received a call from Fire Chief Wilson asking the same question: why was Taftville vacating the station?

Meanwhile, shortly after these conversations, the City’s attorney provided the volunteer department’s legal counsel with an agreement to sign—only after being asked about the conversations mentioned above—that would allow them to stay only if they signed. Like Yantic’s closure, the agreement was sent to the volunteers’ legal counsel with less than one hour for Taftville to review it with its members before they would be evicted.

Taftville believes Chief Wilson and the City committed fraud on the court when Chief Wilson swore to his lawful “termination” of Taftville in the City’s injunction filings when no such termination notice was ever given to Taftville prior to service of the City’s lawsuit alleging the same.

Additionally, yesterday, Laurel Hill was not dispatched to a call in their own district, even though it was the closest unit. Around 1:30 p.m., the Norwich Fire Dept was dispatched to 80 Crouch Ave. for a fire alarm. 80 Crouch Ave. is in the Laurel Hill district, and no tones ever went off for Laurel Hill.

When Norwich dispatch was called to inquire why Laurel Hill wasn’t dispatched, Laurel Hill Chief Aaron Westervelt was told that the CAD computer dispatch system had been down for over 30 minutes.

What was unknown at the time was that Chief Wilson had already implemented another CAD system change in secret earlier that day, which now automatically sends the nearest paid unit to a call. He did not tell anyone about it. At 3:07 p.m., after the incident, he sent an email pointing out the change, which had never been discussed with any volunteer department.

Pursuant to yesterday’s latest unilateral “order” from Chief Wilson, only career fire apparatus will receive automatic dispatch instructions, leaving the volunteers out of the loop and ensuring a paid fire response regardless of location or scope of emergency, thereby doing away with the Town Consolidation Districts historically served by the volunteers under the City Charter.

Essentially, what the City is demanding of the volunteers—including as a condition for allowing Taftville to remain operational—is their agreement to the elimination of tax-free volunteer fire service in exchange for automatic paid fire service at all times.

As we have stated previously, the Norwich community has spoken loudly on the issue, but instead, these Norwich leaders are ignoring them and forcing even more qualified, experienced firefighters out of work at a massive cost to Norwich taxpayers. Additionally, their questionable actions to date have been far from honest and transparent.

We ask the question again: if the City of Norwich leaders pushing for Consolidated Command are so confident they have the public's best interests in mind, then why not put it to a vote and let the public decide?

06/05/2026

We are currently out of service after 109 years. Chief Tim Jencks was served an eviction notice around 10am by state marshals. All property owned by the Taftville Fire Company #2 has been removed and all that remains is city owned equipment. We have complied with the eviction notice and currently Norwich Engine-3 is parked outside the station providing service.

On behalf of the officers and members of the company we are so grateful for all of the support we have received, not only over the years but the past few months. It has not gone unnoticed!

Til next time........... Taftville Fire Company #2 is off the air

06/02/2026

🚑 Exactly 1 week until the first day of class and seats are almost full! Are you registered? 🚒

Our inaugural EMT Initial course at the Occum Fire Department is almost here.

Seats continue to fill as the start date gets closer.

Minimum age: 16 to test for the NREMT.

This course includes:
• EMT education aligned with Connecticut OEMS standards
• Hands on psychomotor skills training
• NREMT cognitive exam preparation
• Realistic EMS scenarios based on field operations

Why students are signing up
• Training inside an active firehouse
• Small class size with direct instructor support
• Real equipment and practical application
• Preparation for both testing and real EMS calls

Whether you are starting your EMS career, joining the fire service, or preparing for healthcare experience, this course was built to prepare you for success.

Class begins June 8th.

Register today:
https://www.box1572solutions.com

Train where the job happens.
Earn your EMT certification with confidence.

06/01/2026

Send a message to learn more

05/27/2026

At 0440 hours this morning, the Ledyard Emergency Communications Center alerted Gales Ferry and Ledyard Fire companies to the 1000 block of Long Cove Road for a vehicle fire reportedly extending to a structure. With subsequent 911 calls stating the house was now involved, the working fire dispatch was requested bringing an extra engine company from the Subase, FAST team from Mohegan Tribe, and an ambulance and paramedic unit to the scene.

First arriving units encountered two well involved vehicles with flames threatening two structures which were extinguished without any extension to either structure. The fire is currently being investigated by the Ledyard Fire Marshal’s Office and there were no reported injuries.

We thank the Subase and Mohegan Tribal Fire Departments for their assistance on scene and the Preston and Laurel Hill Fire Departments for providing station coverage while units operated at the fire.

The Laurel Hill Fire Department proudly marched alongside the Yantic Fire Engine Company, Taftville Fire Company, East G...
05/25/2026

The Laurel Hill Fire Department proudly marched alongside the Yantic Fire Engine Company, Taftville Fire Company, East Great plain and Occum Fire Company during this year’s Memorial Day Parade in honor of those who made the ultimate sacrifice.

05/20/2026

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Laurel Hill, Occum, Taftville, and Yantic Volunteer Fire Departments Set the Record Straight

Volunteer Departments Outline City of Norwich Misrepresentations & Failures To-Date

NORWICH, Conn. (May 20, 2026) – The recent public statements issued by the City of Norwich, City administration, including City Manager Salomone and Fire Chief Wilson, Norwich Firefighters Local 892 leadership, and certain elected officials continue to present an incomplete, misleading, and operationally inaccurate narrative regarding the volunteer fire service system in Norwich.

The volunteer fire departments of Laurel Hill, Occum, Taftville, and Yantic remain committed to protecting the residents of Norwich and continue to support coordinated emergency response operations, mutual aid interoperability, and compliance with established National Incident Management System (NIMS) and Incident Command System (ICS) principles.

The central legal issue currently before the court is not whether emergency services should cooperate. The issue is whether the City can unilaterally restructure the governance, operational authority, and long-standing autonomy of independent volunteer fire departments outside the process required by the Norwich City Charter and without lawful approval through the legislative and judicial processes established for those changes.

The City continues to publicly characterize this dispute as simple “Unified Command” compliance while omitting the broader structural and governance changes being imposed through executive action rather than through ordinance, charter revision, or voter approval. What the City wants by definition is “Consolidated Command,” not “Unified Command.”

The volunteer departments strongly dispute the City’s characterization of recent incidents as evidence of systemic failure in the volunteer fire service.

The City’s public statements repeatedly omit critical operational facts, including:
• longstanding CAD and MDT deficiencies,
• dispatch limitations,
• communications infrastructure problems,
• alerting failures,
• unilateral run card modifications,
• mutual aid restructuring,
• and operational changes implemented without meaningful coordination with volunteer leadership.

These issues have been repeatedly raised with City leadership for months, and in some cases, years.

Recent public claims regarding the April 12 fatal accident in the Occum district are one example.

The City publicly claimed that only one volunteer responded in a personal vehicle, delaying the staffed apparatus. The actual incident documentation reflects multiple responding Occum units and personnel, establishment of incident command within minutes, CPR initiation, mutual aid coordination, EMS operations, and patient care activities throughout the incident.

The City’s public narrative does not accurately reflect the documented operational response.

The City also continues to assert that its restructuring efforts are intended to ensure that “the closest and most capable resources are dispatched automatically.” However, operational realities increasingly demonstrate the opposite.

Run cards within the CCD system have already been modified to reduce or delay volunteer company participation in portions of structure fire responses, while increasing reliance on paid city staffing and outside mutual aid agencies.

In some instances, outside departments such as the Submarine Base Fire Department and the Poquonnock Bridge Fire Department are being dispatched toward Norwich incidents before volunteer companies located within Norwich itself are dispatched.

Approximate travel times from those agencies to portions of Norwich are approximately:
• 23 minutes from Submarine Base Fire Department
• 25 minutes from Poquonnock Bridge Fire Department

At the same time, neighborhood-based Norwich volunteers, who can respond much faster locally, are being moved deeper into alarm assignments or bypassed entirely.

Additional operational examples continue to raise concern.

On a recent medical call:
• At 1731, Engine 3 was released from Beechwood Drive and dispatched to Laurel Hill Avenue.
• At 1731, Squad 66 advised dispatch they had a staffed crew available.
• Dispatch advised that Engine 3 was already responding.
• At 1732, Engine 2 requested Engine 3’s location and was advised they were still on Otrobando Avenue.
• Engine 2 then advised they would handle the call and requested Squad 66 be added.

If the City’s actions were truly driven solely by public safety interests, the available neighborhood-based volunteer resource would have been assigned immediately. Instead, the available volunteer unit was bypassed while a more distant city apparatus continued responding across town.

These operational changes themselves create increased public safety risk.

Neighborhood-based volunteer stations place apparatus and personnel directly within the districts they protect. Suspending volunteer companies, removing apparatus from service, redistributing apparatus, centralizing staffing, and increasing reliance on cross-city responses and outside mutual aid agencies will inevitably increase travel times and delay emergency intervention.

Those delays directly affect:
• fire attack,
• rescue operations,
• EMS intervention,
• civilian survivability,
• firefighter safety,
• and property conservation.

The City has also failed to publicly acknowledge operational incidents involving the modified response model itself, including incidents such as Otis Street, while simultaneously highlighting isolated volunteer incidents to support a narrative of systemic volunteer failure.

The volunteer departments also reject repeated attempts to characterize volunteers as unqualified or incapable of emergency response.

Volunteer firefighters throughout Norwich include experienced Firefighter I personnel, EMTs, officers, instructors, and responders with decades of operational experience. Like volunteer systems nationwide, staffing challenges exist. However, staffing challenges do not justify bypassing the City Charter, dismantling long-standing neighborhood-based emergency response systems, or centralizing operational control through executive action.

Additionally, it is deeply concerning that many members of the Norwich City Council majority have publicly adopted and repeated the City administration’s narrative regarding the volunteer fire departments without first conducting balanced, independent fact-finding with all parties involved.

To date, volunteer fire chiefs have repeatedly raised concerns about operational changes, dispatch modifications, CAD deficiencies, infrastructure problems, alerting failures, mutual aid restructuring, and impacts on the response model. Despite the seriousness of those concerns and the significant consequences these proposed actions may have on public safety, many elected officials have failed to personally meet with volunteer fire chiefs to fully understand the operational realities occurring within the system.

Instead, public comments and published opinions have largely reflected information provided by City administration, union leadership, and City public relations releases while minimizing or disregarding the operational concerns raised by the volunteer departments themselves.

The residents of Norwich deserve elected officials who objectively evaluate all sides of an issue, particularly when the issue involves emergency response, public safety infrastructure, taxpayer impact, and potential restructuring of a fire service system that has protected Norwich neighborhoods for generations.

This is not simply a political disagreement. The decisions being discussed will directly impact emergency response times, fire suppression capability, EMS delivery, rescue operations, staffing deployment, and the overall safety of Norwich residents and firefighters.

The volunteer departments believe that meaningful public discussion requires:
• direct engagement with all fire chiefs,
• transparent operational data review,
• open evaluation of response model changes,
• analysis of dispatch and CAD issues,
• examination of mutual aid restructuring impacts,
• and honest discussion regarding the long-term financial and operational consequences of replacing neighborhood-based volunteer coverage with expanded paid staffing models.

The volunteer departments remain committed to:
• continued lawful emergency operations,
• continued mutual aid cooperation,
• continued NIMS and ICS compliance,
• continued protection of Norwich residents,
• preservation of public safety,
• and resolution of the underlying governance dispute through the judicial process currently underway.

The residents of Norwich deserve a transparent discussion focused on facts, operational realities, response outcomes, fiscal impact, and adherence to the City Charter, rather than on selective public narratives centered on isolated incidents and political rhetoric.

Address

509 Laurel Hill Road
Norwich, CT
06360

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