This topic was already posted months ago... can't be arsed to find it.
You mean that a similar topic was posted months ago, since a similar thing happened in the same county in Tennessee last year, as you can read in the article Parts posted.
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.
I think that the $75 firefighter's fee is included in city taxes, but the fire happened in the county outside the city limits, where the fee is optional.
It was the same way in the town where I grew up. The city firefighters's services were covered in the city's property taxes, but the people out in the county outside the city limits had to pay an annual fee to have the services of the city's firefighters. I think that they would come to your house even if you had not paid the fee, but they would ask for something like $200 to fight the fire if nobody's life was in jeopardy, while the annual fee was much lower if paid in advance, maybe something like $20.
My aunt lived outside the city limits in the county and her house caught fire and burned down one time. I can't remember whether or not they paid the annual fee.