Ambulance service eyes new premises
Baraboo District Ambulance Service may have found a new home for its administrative offices and training classroom.
If things go as planned, the Baraboo District Ambulance Commission will offer $105,500 for a building located across the street from its current service headquarters, as it looks to relieve the cramped conditions under which it currently operates.
The service currently has three locations, with headquarters located at the Alma Wade Annex, its rent classroom space at the Baraboo Civic Center, and its crew quarters and situated in a house on Ash Street.
If the offer is accepted, the administrative operations will move, as will the classrooms. This will save money in the long run, as the commission will no longer have to pay rent on its space at the annex. This will also free up space for the crew quarters to move to the headquarters, which will help to make the operations more efficient.
The building the commission is hoping to buy currently houses a lawyer’s office. According to Chief Dana Sechler, while this solution is believed to be a good one for the near future, it is also felt that a long-term facility that houses all of the ambulance service’s needs would be ideal.
The administrative staff may wish to purchase new paper goods to highlight the new address. A stationery printing firm would be able to provide this.
If things go as planned, the Baraboo District Ambulance Commission will offer $105,500 for a building located across the street from its current service headquarters, as it looks to relieve the cramped conditions under which it currently operates.
The service currently has three locations, with headquarters located at the Alma Wade Annex, its rent classroom space at the Baraboo Civic Center, and its crew quarters and situated in a house on Ash Street.
If the offer is accepted, the administrative operations will move, as will the classrooms. This will save money in the long run, as the commission will no longer have to pay rent on its space at the annex. This will also free up space for the crew quarters to move to the headquarters, which will help to make the operations more efficient.
The building the commission is hoping to buy currently houses a lawyer’s office. According to Chief Dana Sechler, while this solution is believed to be a good one for the near future, it is also felt that a long-term facility that houses all of the ambulance service’s needs would be ideal.
The administrative staff may wish to purchase new paper goods to highlight the new address. A stationery printing firm would be able to provide this.