Community Voices: The People Who Show Up

Cedar Valley News — Tuesday, March 3, 2026
Community Voices: The People Who Show Up
George Khan
From the fictional town of Cedar Valley, where characters from Quiet Echo continue to respond to real-world events.

The siren went off at 2:14 last Thursday morning. I know because the twins sat up in bed and Aisha was already at the window before I found my boots. By the time I got outside, I could see the light bar heading south on Route 9. One truck. Used to be two.

Cedar Valley’s volunteer fire department has eleven active members. Three years ago it had twenty-two. The youngest is thirty-eight. The oldest is sixty-seven and has a bad knee, which he does not talk about. When the siren sounds at two in the morning, these are the people who get out of bed, leave their families, and drive toward the thing everyone else is running from. Nobody pays them.

This is not a Cedar Valley problem. It is an American problem nobody is covering.

New York State had 120,000 volunteer firefighters five years ago. Today it has eighty thousand. Forty thousand gone. On Long Island, the Floral Park Center Fire Department closed weeks ago. Other departments are pooling crews just to get a single truck out the door. A house fire in Mineola last month required five departments to respond — not because the fire was large, but because no single department had enough people.

Nationally, the numbers tell the same story. In 1984, nearly 900,000 Americans served as volunteer firefighters. By 2020, the number had dropped below seven hundred thousand. During the same period, calls to those departments tripled — from fewer than twelve million a year to more than thirty-six million. Fewer people doing three times the work.

Eighty-two percent of fire departments in this country are all-volunteer or mostly volunteer. In rural America, the percentage is higher. When your house catches fire outside a city, the person pulling up in the truck is your neighbor. Not a professional. A neighbor. Someone who trained on weekends, bought gear with pancake breakfast money, and showed up because nobody else would.

In Belle Valley, Ohio, the volunteer chief protects a sprawling rural county on a budget of fifty-eight thousand dollars a year. Less than one American worker’s average annual wage. The department raises money through gun raffles, bowling tournaments, and barbecue dinners. When the engine needs replacing, the price tag can reach seven figures. The budget does not reach six.

In Oklahoma, volunteer departments are fighting wildfires right now with outdated gear and dwindling supplies. Communities are donating bottled water and beef jerky to keep their own firefighters in the field. In Missouri, rural chiefs say the grant funding they once depended on is drying up and growing more competitive every cycle.

I service two of our department’s portable pumps. I rebuilt the pull-start on a K-12 rescue saw last fall. I know the equipment because I know the people carrying it. Every one of them has a day job. Every one of them misses sleep, misses dinner, misses the game. They do not complain about it. They do not post about it. They just show up.

Teresa wrote yesterday about Baker & Taylor — a company forgetting who it served. The volunteer fire service is the opposite story. These are people who have not forgotten. They remember every time the siren wakes them at two in the morning. The problem is not forgetting. The problem is there are fewer of them every year, and nobody is standing behind them to fill the gap.

To be sure, the world changed. People work longer hours. Commutes are farther. Families have less margin. The young people who once walked into the firehouse at eighteen now move to cities for work and do not come back. Asking someone to volunteer 40 hours a month on top of a full-time job and a family is a lot to ask. The decline is understandable.

But understandable is not acceptable. These departments are the last line between a house fire and a total loss. Between a car wreck on a rural highway and a person bleeding out before help arrives. Between a family asleep at three in the morning and nobody coming when the smoke detector goes off.

Lars told me something last week. He said every institution in a small town survives on the same fuel — people who show up without being asked. The church. The school board. The fire department. The food bank. When the showing-up people get tired and nobody replaces them, the institution does not reform. It just closes. And the community wakes up one morning and wonders where it went.

I watched the truck come back Thursday morning around four. One truck. Eleven people standing between this town and whatever comes next. They remembered who they are. The question is whether the rest of us will remember them before it is too late.

This editorial is part of the fictional Cedar Valley News series. While the people and town are fictional, the national events they reflect on are real.

Want to know the full story behind Cedar Valley? Teresa, Caleb, Dan, and the community you’ve come to know in these editorials first came together in Quiet Echo. Discover how a small town found its way from fear to fellowship—one quiet act of courage at a time. Available on Amazon: https://bit.ly/3ME4nSs

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