Government

Iron River Town Board to Discuss Timber Sale, EMS Services, Park Rules April 9

Iron River's town board convened April 9 to weigh a Bayfield County EMS proposal and a potential timber sale, two items with direct financial stakes for residents.

Marcus Williams2 min read
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Iron River Town Board to Discuss Timber Sale, EMS Services, Park Rules April 9
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The Iron River Town Board convened Thursday, April 9, at 6 p.m. with an agenda that put emergency medical services and a timber sale at the center of local deliberations.

A proposal from Bayfield County regarding EMS services was among the most consequential items before the board, alongside a separate discussion of the town's current ambulance loan renewal. Together, those two items framed a concrete conversation about how Iron River funds and sustains emergency medical coverage. Department heads from EMS, Police, Library, Highway/Streets/Parks/Recycling Center, and Fire all provided reports, giving the board a full operational picture before action items were called.

The timber sale discussion carried both economic and land-management weight. Municipal timber sales can generate town revenue while raising questions about how the board balances conservation with resource use on town-held property — and local contractors have a direct stake in the outcome.

Moon Lake Park's rules and regulations also came before the board, a signal that seasonal use concerns have reached the point requiring formal authorization. Updated park rules, if adopted, would take effect on how residents and visitors use the site heading into warmer months.

Additional items on the April 9 agenda included a building update tied to Anthony Mitchell, a minimum driveway width question raised through Bayfield County Zoning by a resident named Ruth, and a potential support letter for a local Sanitary District. The board also considered a resolution backing a comprehensive and sustainable transportation funding solution, a policy position that could shape the town's stance on regional infrastructure decisions.

Routine business included approval of prior meeting minutes, adoption of the financial report, and consent agenda items. Citizen comment was formally allocated on the agenda before action items were called.

Minutes and any adopted resolutions from the April 9 meeting will be posted to the town's website under public-record requirements.

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