/Fort Myers Beach News




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Fort Myers Beach Fire Chief Scott Wirth stands in front of the new fire station on the former Topps supermarket lot. Photo by Nathan Mayberg

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The new Fort Myers Beach fire station off Estero Boulevard is set to be operational in March. Photo by Nathan Mayberg

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Fort Myers Beach Fire Chief Scott Wirth. Photo by Nathan Mayberg

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Fort Myers Beach fire station. Photo by Nathan Mayberg

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Fort Myers Beach Fire Chief Scott Wirth. Photo by Nathan Mayberg

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Fort Myers Beach Fire Chief Scott Wirth. Photo by Nathan Mayberg

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Fort Myers Beach fire station. Photo by Nathan Mayberg

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The look of the formidable new Fort Myers Beach firehouse is

zooming into focus eight months into its construction.

Fort Myers Beach Fire Chief Scott Wirth expects that when the

work is done in March on building the department’s new station

on Estero Boulevard, the 35-feet high structure will not only be

able to withstand a major hurricane but will be able to protect

firefighters staying there in a minor one.

“This station is a little higher than our other stations. If we know

we have a Category 1 or 2 hurricane, then we have the ability

(to keep some staff on site),” Wirth said. “We have more

opportunity to keep this station in service, at least we shelter

here until the storm goes by and then we would be able to get in

service quicker versus if we evacuated.”

The garage floor is eight feet above sea level, three feet higher

than Estero Boulevard and four feet higher than the Tropical Shores Way entrance.

Wirth said he would be comfortable with the new station staying

staff in a Category 1 or 2 hurricane. “This gives us a little more

opportunity to stay in district for those smaller category storms,”

Wirth said.

A swamp buggy is on the way, which Wirth hopes will help the

department on rescue missions through flooded roads in a

smaller category hurricane, like when Estero Boulevard and

San Carlos Boulevard turned into rivers during Hurricane Milton.

The Lee County Sheriff’s Office was able to use one effectively

last year during hurricanes.

Wirth expects the swamp buggy to be ready before the next

hurricane season to be used in high-water situations. The

swamp buggy is expected to be handle up to four feet of water

in the roads. “It depends on the winds,” Wirth said. “It definitely

gives us more capabilities than we have now by about a foot

and a half more water,” he said.

The department also has a small inflatable boat trailer which it

purchased and conducted training on last month. The inflatable

rapid response boat is lightweight and can be used to evacuate

civilians during floods, and on search and rescue missions.

In Hurricane Helene, the water was too deep for the

department’s firefighters to get to an electrical bike fire that

started from the battery. Luckily the fire went out once the bike

fell into the flooded waters inside the garage. With the swamp

buggy, the department would have been able to respond, Wirth

said.

During Hurricane Milton, the department evacuated off site.

During a recent tour of the new station, Wirth touted elevated

electrical outlets that have been installed to protect against

water damage on floodproofed walls. Vent openings in the

station are meant to allow water to exit in the event of a

hurricane and flooding. A generator was placed 18-feet high to

withstand a major hurricane. All of the doors in the garage will

have flood panels.

“We are basically floodproofing to 14 feet above sea level,”

Wirth said. Wirth has ensured that all of the department’s

valuable equipment and the electrical room is being placed high

up to avoid damage from flooding.

The new fire station, which is costing approximately $11 million

to construct (after 435,000 in architecture fees and $148,000 for engineering), will be able to house the Fort Myers Beach Fire Control District’s ladder truck and primary ambulance. The station will also be home to firefighters working 24-hour shifts.

At least six firefighters will be rotating 24-hour shifts at a time at the station, which means the station will have enough room for their housing quarters.

The department’s other station on the island at Lenell Road, next to Santini Marina Plaza, will house the department’s fire engine and its other ambulance. The department also has a fire engine at its station off island on San Carlos Boulevard, where it shares space with Lee County EMS and their ambulance.

Along with the living spaces for firefighters working overnight shifts, there will be a workout room with equipment for both indoor and outdoor exercises.

Wirth said his background managing a construction company has helped him in helping to oversee the construction of the fire station, which is being led by the Wright Construction Group of Fort Myers. GMA Architects & Planners led the designing.

“At this point, we are under budget,” Wirth said. “I’m hoping to come in closer to $11 million than the guaranteed maximum price (of the contract) of almost $12 million.

Wirth was the operations chief with the City of Fort Myers Fire Department when they built a new fire station in downtown Fort Myers in 2015. With joined the Fort Myers Beach Fire Control District in 2017 after retiring from the City of Fort Myers fire department.

There is floodproofing throughout the new fire station, including foam

insulation on the ceiling. Countertops inside the kitchen and

dining room are stainless steal, for durability and safety.

“More expensive to purchase initially but they will last 20 to 30

years instead of a laminate that could wear out,” Wirth said.

Everything installed is “made for durability, its built to last. It’s

built for safety.” Fire suppression systems are installed with the

oven in the kitchen.

Contractors are putting multiple coats of waterproofed layers of

paint while using high grade shiners, Wirth said.

The building is being constructed to withstand winds of 200

miles per hour with the highest level of impact protection. They

are a limited number of windows throughout the building in

order to reduce the risk of water leaking in.

The plans for the newest station go back nearly five years to

when the district acquired the property on the former Topps lot

at 2545 and 2555 Estero Boulevard for $3.99 million in January

of 2020, next to the former Town Hall.

The district still plans to sell a little less than an acre of property

in the rear of their Estero Boulevard property. The district’s next

project will be to construct a new administration building and

training facility off Main Street on San Carlos Island. Once that

is built, the district will sell its administration building on Voorhis

St. The district sold its fire station off Donora Boulevard last

year, which had been considered totaled by Hurricane Ian. The

new administration building will also have a room for fire

commissioner meetings. The seawall and docks at the property

need to be rebuilt, Wirth said.

The Fort Myers Beach Fire Control District currently employs 36

full-time firefighters and paramedics, as well as 16

administration staff. The department is looking to hire

firefighters to bring their total firefighting unit to 48 firefighters

and paramedics, for a total staff of 64.

Meanwhile, the department is conducting a merger study with

the Iona-McGregor Fire District. Such a merger could have to

go in front of voters.

The planning for the new fire station to be able to withstand a

major hurricane was done in the light of the town’s experience

of having gone through Hurricane Ian, which killed 16 people on

the island. Last year, the town also went through three other

hurricanes.

“It’s three years since Hurricane Ian. While we work and live

here every day and we see the impacts still, we realize that it’s

something that affected us, it’s part of our history, but it’s not

part of our identity now. We are consciously moving away from

the after-effects from ian,” Wirth said.

One of the major initiatives Wirth has overseen since Hurricane

Ian is a new program for town property owners to notify the fire

department if they will be staying or leaving during a hurricane.

That was used effectively during Hurricane Helene and

Hurricane Milton and will allow firefighters in the event of a

major search and rescue operation after a hurricane to know

which homes were not occupied, and which ones they need to

check on. After Hurricane Ian, firefighters had to break down

doors and windows during search and rescue attempts, not

knowing which homes may have had people inside them. Now

folks can sign up on the department’s website to let them know

if they will be home or not for a hurricane.

Wirth said the difficult parts of Hurricane Ian included rebuilding

from all of the destruction. He said he learned a lot from the

State of Louisiana’s incident management team during the

search and rescue mission, which included more than 1,000

responders. “They were huge,” Wirth said. Wirth said the

department also learned from firefighters from the Fire

Department of New York, who relieved the Louisiana

responders two weeks later. “We were making incident

management plans every day,” Wirth said. “It’s humbling to

have to be the ones being helped.”

Wirth said one of the lessons he learned most from the

response to Hurricane Ian was the importance of having state

and federal agencies coordinate with the infrastructure to

provide assistance during a major hurricane.

“People talk a lot about government, FEMA and everything else,

the State of Florida does a tremendous job responding to large-

scale emergencies,” Wirth said.

“They had us help before we knew we needed it,” Wirth said.

Next time there is a hurricane, Wirth said the department will be

even better prepared with its experiences. “If we’re in shelter

and we see webcams with buildings floating down the

boulevard, we’ll have those resources ordered right out of the

gate. They will be here quicker than they did during Ian,

knowing what we know now.”