Yahoo News
A Tennessee couple helplessly watched their home burn to the ground, along with all of their possessions, because they did not pay a $75 annual fee to the local fire department
Vicky Bell told the NBC affiliate WPSD-TV
that she called 911 when her mobile home in Obion County caught fire.
Firefighters arrived on the scene but as the fire raged, they simply
stood by and did nothing. "In an emergency, the first thing you think
of, 'Call 9-1-1," homeowner Bell said. However, Bell and her husband
were forced to walk into the burning home in an attempt to retrieve
their own belongings. "You could look out my mom's trailer and see the
trucks sitting at a distance," Bell said. "We just wished we could've
gotten more out."
South
Fulton Mayor David Crocker defended the fire department, saying that if
firefighters responded to non-subscribers, no one would have an
incentive to pay the fee. Residents in the city of South Fulton receive
the service automatically, but it is not extended to those living in the
greater county-wide area.
"There's
no way to go to every fire and keep up the manpower, the equipment, and
just the funding for the fire department," Crocker said.
The
South Fulton policy produced precisely the same nightmare scenario last
year, when homeowner Gene Cranick--who had likewise failed to pay the
$75 annual fee for rural Obion County residents--saw his house engulfed
by flames as South Fulton firefighter watched close by. That incident sparked a debate among conservative pundits over the limits of fee-for-service approaches to government.
For his
part, Mayor Crocker stressed that the city's firefighters will help
people in danger, even those who haven't paid the fee. "After the last
situation, I would hope that everybody would be well aware of the rural
fire fees, this time," Crocker said.
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