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I cannot get into the minds of the people involved, I can only talk about on a policy level and an individual level from my perspective. It's the same for everyone else in this thread. |
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And while it may not have been the best plan, it was the plan. If they wanted to ensure that their home was protected, they should have paid. Hopefully, this will push the county into action and allow it to find a better solution. In the meantime, I won't be canonizing the Cranicks like some folks have done (not you, DF, people in general). They made a poor choice that, unfortunately, cost them everything. But it was their choice. ETA: Looks like one or more of the individual fire departments have been in contact with the municipalities to try to get a fire tax for the county, but they got a lot of pushback. |
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As to your other points above, I can add this since maybe I am not quite as much as an "outside observer." I live in the same general region of the country as this incident. Also, as I have stated prior in this thread, I also live just outside my local city limits and must subscribe to an identical type fire service if I want fire protection. Mine runs $128 year. Earlier this year the city tried to annex a very large portion of the county, including my 600+ home subdivision (<1 mile from city limits) as well as several other areas that could be actually be considered rural. There was huge outrage against this effort, possibly bordering on 90% of the affected residents against it. The main reason that the residents were against it is that they are happy with the private services that they contract with (fire, garbage, sewer, etc) and feel that the huge increase in taxes (~150%) would not get them any better way of life. So, as to your view that fire protection should never be "fee for service-" at the present time the people in my area have not been swayed by this story even though the exact same thing could happen here. Our county residents continue to think that the subsription service is a much better option than paying city taxes. /2 cents from a not-quite-so-outsider |
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That's a medium sized government argument. A small government argument is that the public fire service should have never existed. |
After reading all of this, there's one thing I still can't believe...
People in the midwest have Earthquake Insurance? I live on the Ring of Fire, and I don't have Earthquake Insurance. I don't know anyone here in Seattle who has it, and we have lots of faults running all over the place. The only people I know with EI live in California. A 5.0 is a pretty small earthquake, one that won't cause any significant - if any - damage. We have them in the west pretty regularly and sometimes you can't even really feel them. Earthquake insurance in the midwest is as necessary as tornado insurance is in the west. In other words, ridiculous. |
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It shouldn't be about incorporation vs. optional fee, IMO. And the fact that incorporation was on the table, not a requirement to pay for emergency services, brings a lot more issues into play. |
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New Madrid Fault Line. |
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...f_Fire.svg.png
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I don't even know why anyone would try to justify something like this. And the fact that someone was going to pay the firefighters when it happened, and they still wouldn't do it is just suspicious to me. I wonder if there is more going on behind the scenes. What kind of people could just let a house burn? I wouldn't want people like that serving in any type of rescue capacity in my city. That's just sick. And where I live, all of that is built into the annual taxes. But even if someone is delinquent on those taxes and it could be argued that they didn't pay their "fee," the fire department would still be called to put out a house fire. Karma is not a game and I have a strong feeling that these people are going to reap what they have sown. Sometimes it just doesn't pay to take such a position and stick with it when to do so is morally wrong. |
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I can see the arguments as to why it's bad policy, but I can also see that this is democratic local government in action -- they can weigh the policy considerations for themselves and decide how they want to handle it. We can second guess them all we want to, but they get to make the call for themselves. |
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Rural life does come with a few costs, for example, you know that in most cases, law enforcement coming to your aid is probably going to take a pretty long time, so you have to be armed. You have to maintain a well and a septic system. You probably have propane gas. If you live in a neighborhood and have a decent association, you can contract for security/police and fire services. It's a different sort of lifestyle and a different sort of person. No one out there typically wants to have a governmental solution for their problems. And as you can see, that doesn't always work out nearly as well as the alternative. That said, these folks pay a lot less for fire protection than you or I do. |
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