there's a little guy in the back who thinks it's pretty rudeNot rude, that's survival. Anything goes in a snowfight. Worse than a street fight, cause it's so danged cold.
Cuz I beat you to it, yummy.Y No yellow snow, either. ;-)
On the bright side, I bet the taxes are low thereThat thing about not needing fireman reminded of this.
Tennessee Family's Home Burns to the Ground as Firefighters Stand and Watch
Firefighters aren't afraid to crash through windows and doors to douse flames, but a Tennessee family's failure to pay a $75 fee stopped firefighters dead in their tracks as a home burned to the ground. South Fulton, Tenn. firefighters stood on the sidelines, watching as flames engulfed Gene...abcnews.go.com
I can't even open this page in public because of the ads I'm getting. It's horribleYou guys are messing with my ad feeds, its getting ugly
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This is dumber than sh*t. Here's a quote:That thing about not needing fireman reminded of this.
Tennessee Family's Home Burns to the Ground as Firefighters Stand and Watch
Firefighters aren't afraid to crash through windows and doors to douse flames, but a Tennessee family's failure to pay a $75 fee stopped firefighters dead in their tracks as a home burned to the ground. South Fulton, Tenn. firefighters stood on the sidelines, watching as flames engulfed Gene...abcnews.go.com
So, instead of writing up some taxes and billing by address, they want every individual homeowner to pay a subscription type model? So the guy with 5 acres and a guest house pays the same as the guy with 1/4 acre and a trailer? And the fireman have to reference a log of delinquent accounts before doing anything? More to the point, what if someone had died. Would the folks on site not be liable? (I'll reckon they would be, as well as if the fire spread to another paying residence, hence their need to 'stand on the sidelines and watch')South Fulton has had the "pay to spray" policy in place for more than 20 years, and the fees -- which often cover police services, too -- are fairly common in rural areas. Without implementing complex tax arrangements to cover cash-strapped city budgets, there are simply few other options.
"If the city starts fighting fires in the homes of people outside the city who don't pay, why would anyone pay?" said Jacqueline Byers with the National Association of Counties.
The thought process probably went something like, I'm not paying that, what are they gonna do? Sit there and watch my house burn down if I don't?Y'all see
This is dumber than sh*t. Here's a quote:
So, instead of writing up some taxes and billing by address, they want every individual homeowner to pay a subscription type model? So the guy with 5 acres and a guest house pays the same as the guy with 1/4 acre and a trailer? And the fireman have to reference a log of delinquent accounts before doing anything? More to the point, what if someone had died. Would the folks on site not be liable? (I'll reckon they would be, as well as if the fire spread to another paying residence, hence their need to 'stand on the sidelines and watch')