Medina tries to determine next steps in possible ladder truck sale

By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 24 February 2026 at 4:31 pm

Fire departments from 5 states so far have expressed interest in ladder truck

Provided photo: Medina firefighters train on the new ladder truck for the department about two weeks ago. The truck is currently in Tonawanda for outfitting and some electrical tweaks and will stay in the DPW building when its back in Medina. The truck isn’t being detailed with lettering for Medina Fire Department.

MEDINA – The Medina Village Board is trying to determine the next steps with how it will proceed with possibly selling the fire department’s new ladder truck.

Three of the board members – Deborah Padoleski, Mark Prawel and Scott Bieliski – voted on Feb. 9 to declare the ladder truck as surplus to start the process of a possible sale.

The board on Monday morning met with the village’s bond counsel, financial advisors, and attorney to discuss protocol in following municipal law, should a majority of the board decide to sell the truck.

If the truck is sold and the loan from the U.S. Department of Agriculture paid off, the village would still be out $42,000 in a financing charge.

The village also could face potential tax payments if it sells the truck and makes a profit, Mayor Marguerite Sherman said.

The USDA representative and other village advisors said declaring the new truck surplus and then moving to sell it seems unprecedented with no past experiences to guide the involved parties.

“We are trying to get on the same page in a very unusual circumstance,” Sherman said during Monday evening’s board meeting.

Sherman said the village was advised it is obligated to try to maximize the purchase price for the $1.7 million ladder truck.

The sale could happen through an auction, sealed bids, or RFPs (request for proposals).  The village could hire a broker to help with the sale.

Padoleski said her goal is to at least get enough money to pay off the truck. She sees the truck as unaffordable for village taxpayers, especially when the cost of addition is included in the overall cost. Medina might need to spend over $1 million for a one-bay addition to the fire hall because the new truck doesn’t fit in the current fire hall.

The truck issue has garnered headlines in the region and in national fire house magazines and blogs.

Sherman said fire departments have reached out to Medina from nearby Brockport, and the states of Idaho, Michigan, Alabama and Pennsylvania. They want to be informed if Medina decides how it will put the truck up for sale.