Sunday JANUARY 11, 2009 Last modified:
Saturday, January 10, 2009 11:17 PM CST
Flame on
Compromise re-ignites Veteran's Memorial fire
By NEIL YOUNG/The Daily News
BULLHEAD CITY - City officials quickly reversed course Friday morning and turned the perpetual, or eternal, flame back on at the new Medal of Honor Memorial at the Arizona Veterans Memorial Park.
Now if only the wind will cooperate, it will stay on for a while.
The city had turned off the flame Monday, after receiving a $961.17 bill from Southwest Gas for just one month of service. Bullhead City took over maintenance of the park from the Veterans United organization last July.
Bullhead City Mayor Jack Hakim and Karla Brady, parks, recreation and community services director, met Thursday with John “Mickey” McClure, Veterans United spokesman.
Hakim told McClure the city would make every effort to turn the flame back on within two weeks, after researching ways to save money on the natural gas bill.
“I rushed to judgment in my conversation, saying, ‘Let's wait. Give us two weeks and we'll take care of it,' ” Hakim said Friday. “I erred. I should have just said, ‘Turn it back on.' And that's what I thought afterwards.”
Hakim said he got together with City Manager Tim Ernster after the McClure meeting. “We thought about it, and yes, an eternal flame is an eternal flame and our intentions were to turn it on (Friday).” Hakim said the decision to turn the flame back on was obviously the right thing to do “and it didn't come from pressure.”
“I don't think anyone intended for that flame to be off permanently,” Ernster said. “And, in hindsight, we should have just left the flame on, and then gone ahead and worked this out.”
Saturday morning, though, the flame wasn't lit. More accurately, it wouldn't stay lit as gusting winds played havoc with the automatic ignition system.
In the meantime, the city will decide how best to lower the flame, which will reduce the cost significantly. The flame would be turned up during special events and holidays like Memorial Day, the Fourth of July and Veterans Day, Ernster said.
“I'm proud that he re-thought it and decided that's a better avenue to go,” McClure said Friday, “and hopefully now all the veterans groups and everybody else can go happily on their way.”
A Veterans Advisory Council meeting was scheduled for Jan. 22, but city officials decided to move it up one week to 2 p.m. Thursday in the Council chamber, 1255 Marina Blvd. The veterans council consists of area veterans organizations “and the purpose is to sit down together and discuss ways and means to keep the park functioning,” Hakim said.
Ernster said Thursday's meeting will focus on the eternal flame issue with possible “suggestions on maybe how there might be some way to raise funds in the community.”