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faceless admin
Joined: 25 Apr 2006
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Posted: Thu Dec 08, 2011 5:14 am Post subject: Firefighters let fire happen... |
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Tennessee fire dept. watches home burn because homeowner didn't pay fee
Lou Gulino
syracuse.com
December 07, 2011
When fire broke out in her mobile home in Tennessee's rural Obion County Monday morning, Vicky Bell called 911. The fire department from nearby South Fulton arrived, and then just watched as the home burned to the ground because Bell had not paid the $75 annual fee for fire protection. Bell and her boyfriend, Brian Gilbert, escaped the fire without injury, but lost everything. "We have no idea where we will go from here," Bell told KFVS-TV. "We are very lucky it was minutes from getting us."
This is the second time in recent years firefighters from South Fulton have refused to fight a fire because the homeowner didn't pay the $75 annual subscription fee. The department made headlines in 2010 for watching another trailer home burn because the homeowner failed to pay the fee. Obion County Mayor Benny McGuire tells the WPSD-TV "To me, it's not an issue. To me it's like car insurance. If you have a car, you pay insurance. If you want protection, you pay the price."
South Fulton Mayor David Crocker says if the fire department responded to homes where people failed to pay the fee there would be no reason for anyone to subscribe to the service. "There's no way to go to every fire and keep up the manpower, the equipment, and just the funding for the fire department (without the fee)," he told the Tennessean. Crocker said if someone's life was at risk the fire department would act regardless of whether a homeowner had paid.
Bell told KFVS-TV she didn't pay the fee because she didn't have insurance, which she told the station is a requirement in order to subscribe to the firefighting service. "I'm not mad at the city, I understand," said Bell. The station reported Bell told them most of her neighbors in the trailer park did not have insurance because they are not eligible. She did not explain why they were not eligible for insurance. Crocker told the Tennessean there are about 2,000 people in the rural area who are affected by the subscription fee, and most pay it. "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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Forward the civilisation... |
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pirtybirdy 'Native New Yorker'
Joined: 29 Apr 2006 Location: FL USA
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Posted: Thu Dec 08, 2011 11:36 am Post subject: |
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This isn't the first story I've heard about this. I'm positive I've heard this happened to someone else quite awhile ago. It's a bit crazy. If they are saying they are not eligible for insurance and insurance is required to pay the fire fighting fee, then I'm thinking the onus is on the local government to fix that problem. They should allow someone to pay the fire fee without insurance. It's all about paying for manpower and equipment for them as they had stated. |
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steg
Joined: 03 Dec 2011
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Posted: Thu Dec 08, 2011 12:47 pm Post subject: |
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Is this what society has come to? Stories like this make me want to chuck the towel in and cede that there's no hope for humanity.
Why not save her home and then go after the paltry 75 dollars once it was over, instead of this vulgar occurence whereby they used the BURNING DOWN OF A HOUSE as a warning to others to pay up!!
Absolutely disgusting and Americans ought to be ashamed to read this, redneck or not. |
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