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History of the San Ramon Fire Protection District

In
1963 the San Ramon Fire Protection District was formed to
serve the area of San Ramon to the County line. he decision to form the
District came from a dissatisfaction with the way the taxes from
the community were being distributed by the Eastern Fire
District. Howard Wiedemann and Bill Fereira circulated a
petition throughout San Ramon, all the residents signed in favor
of the proposal, except two. Armed with this mandate they set
about creating a Fire District.
The District was formed as an
autonomous special district. This means that the Board of
Commissioners was a locally elected body, with complete decision
making authority, answerable directly to the local voters. The
initial Board of Directors were Howard Schlessinger, Howard
Wiedemann, Armand Borel, A. C. Johnson and L. A. Davidson.

The autonomous District was
actually an accident. When Bill Fereira and Howard Wiedemann
decided to try to create a separate Fire District, they
contacted an attorney Bob Eshillman to assist with the legal
process. The attorney had a decidedly hostile relationship
with one of the county Board of Supervisors. This Supervisor
thought he was hurting Mr. Eshillman by engineering the
paperwork to make the District autonomous. This ploy nearly
worked, for several months the newly created District was not
able to levy taxes, the County refused to lend it any money, and
the Eastern District removed its equipment. With no equipment
of its own, Bill Fereira scrambled around to borrow a pick-up
truck and some rudimentary fire-fighting equipment.
San Ramon consisted of a small
commercial area, to the north of Crow Canyon Road, primarily
along San Ramon Valley Blvd. and a large area of rural farm
and ranch properties to the south.
The largest employer in the
area at that time was the Bishop Ranch. This was a working
ranch, now a large business park with the same name.
The
District grew from the influx of industrial employers moving
into San Ramon. Companies such as AeroJet (Aerospace),
Filper (Automated Fruit Handling Equipment), MBA (Military
Weapons and Research) and EG&G (Government Research), chose
to establish facilities in the area of northern San Ramon.
The original fire station was
located in what was a car servicing facility, owned and operated
by Bill Fereira. Bill was also the mechanic for the Eastern
Fire District, he would leave in the morning and spend all day
on a 100 mile trek to all the Eastern Stations, located in
Antioch, Pittsburg, Marsh Creek, Tassajara and Moraga and
finally back to San Ramon.
The fire station building is
now once again a car repair shop located across the street from
the boat yard in San Ramon.


After the formation of the District the
entire building was made into a fire station. The firefighters
and apparatus shared the apparatus floor for some time.
Eventually, the apartment
building in the rear was included in the station to house the
firefighters. Not long before the merger of the Danville and
San Ramon Districts, a "Butler" building was constructed on the
land next to the fire station. This new building housed three
apparatus bays, which left enough space in the old building for
offices and the firefighters.
The District’s fire insurance
class which was improved from a 7 to a 5 in 1968. From its
inception Bill Fereira was the Fire Chief, in 1965 he was hired
as the first full time employee. He served in that capacity
until his retirement in 1978. After his retirement the Danville
Fire Marshal Roy Asmundsen was appointed Chief.

The Danville and San Ramon
Districts merged in March, 1980 and the name was changed to the
San Ramon Valley Fire Protection District. The Directors in 1980
instrumental in the successful merger were: Armand Borel (SR),
Ben Clark (SR), Al Huovinen (Dan), Bob Ingham (Dan), Sandy Jack
(SR), Don Miladinovich (Dan), Bill Orr (Dan), Sam Papalardo
(Dan), Lou Sylvia (SR) and Matt Winzen (SR).


Danville Fire
San Ramon Fire
Tassajara Fire
Dougherty
Fire

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