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Old 01-06-2010, 09:00 AM
 
Location: on top of a mountain
6,994 posts, read 12,734,672 times
Reputation: 3286

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Yikes...this will generate lots of questions! WTF???
Are you required to have homeowners insurance by the banks in Alaska if you have a mortgage??? If so will they pay for a burned down home if the fire dept did not respond because you are outside the fire limit area? This would be a good thing to let new prospective off the grid people know!!
here's the story link:

http://www.adn.com/3437/story/1079875.html
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Old 01-06-2010, 09:14 AM
 
Location: Dallas, TX
2,346 posts, read 6,925,871 times
Reputation: 2324
This is nothing unusual. I have seen many, many similar stories over the years throughout the United States.

What they did was standard practice for voluntary fire protection districts. They will save lives for free. If you want your property saved, you need to pony up ahead of time.

If they *did* put out the fire, they would have removed any incentive for ANYONE to pay their contribution to the fire brigade. It's a reflection of human nature, not the cold-heartedness of the firemen.
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Old 01-06-2010, 09:19 AM
 
Location: Palmer
2,519 posts, read 7,032,359 times
Reputation: 1395
Quote:
Originally Posted by Big G View Post
This is nothing unusual. I have seen many, many similar stories over the years throughout the United States.

What they did was standard practice for voluntary fire protection districts. They will save lives for free. If you want your property saved, you need to pony up ahead of time.

If they *did* put out the fire, they would have removed any incentive for ANYONE to pay their contribution to the fire brigade. It's a reflection of human nature, not the cold-heartedness of the firemen.
Exactly correct
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Old 01-06-2010, 10:02 AM
 
Location: Wasilla, AK
2,795 posts, read 5,614,728 times
Reputation: 2530
Being a "cabin" means there's a good possibility that there was no mortgage and that he had built it out of pocket. In the Miller's Reach fire of '96, a lot people who lost homes had built them as they could afford to and had no insurance.
When these situations happen (and I think this is at least the 3rd one in the past year that's made the papers) the fire department points out that if they are out of the service area fighting a fire, and a home INSIDE the fire area (where people are paying extra in the their property taxes for the protection) burns, it puts them in a position of being liable. (Hello lawsuit!)
If I go to McDonalds and say no thanks to the french fries with my burger, I can't walk over to someone else's table and grab their fries.
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Old 01-06-2010, 10:20 AM
 
Location: Charlotte, NC
11,839 posts, read 28,951,581 times
Reputation: 2809
That's why people live near lakes, ponds & rivers...
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Old 01-06-2010, 11:23 AM
 
Location: Anchorage
4,061 posts, read 9,883,535 times
Reputation: 2351
I would think the homeowner's insurance company would require information on fire protection availability prior to covering loss from fire, just like they do for people living in flood plains and the like. I don't think that insurance coverage would be offered for cabins in areas like this if they weren't members of the plan.
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Old 01-06-2010, 01:08 PM
 
Location: Dangling from a mooses antlers
7,308 posts, read 14,688,413 times
Reputation: 6238
When we first moved to Ketchikan if you lived on the north end you either had to pay Pond Reef FD $250 a year to be a member or they would not respond. We knew a family that tried to pay as the firefighters protected the houses on both sides of theirs as theirs burned to the ground. It's just a fact of life in some parts of Alaska.
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Old 01-06-2010, 02:55 PM
 
Location: Alaska
1,437 posts, read 4,803,190 times
Reputation: 933
Quote:
Originally Posted by stiffnecked View Post
When we first moved to Ketchikan if you lived on the north end you either had to pay Pond Reef FD $250 a year to be a member or they would not respond.
good grief, that's a bargain.
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Old 01-06-2010, 03:59 PM
 
Location: Anchorage
1,923 posts, read 4,715,110 times
Reputation: 871
I'm still a little confused.

He lived just outside the palmer fire service area, there fore he SHOULD have been covered by a volunteer fire service IF there was one.
I think the story was very unclear.

We lived in Delta Junction for 8 years. DH was on the volunteer force. That is ALL they had. they would come to your home if you had a fire no matter what. But it was paid for by man hours as opposed to tax dollars and I do think they charged for their service AFTER the fact. (i suppose insurance might have covered part of that fee)
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Old 01-06-2010, 09:22 PM
 
Location: Palmer
2,519 posts, read 7,032,359 times
Reputation: 1395
He was OUTSIDE the fire service area. If he had been INSIDE the area he would have been covered.
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