Cedar Valley News
April 23, 2026
Someone in Pine Level, Alabama
Is Alive Because a Town Meeting Happened
From the Mayor’s Desk
By Caleb Mercer, Mayor
On March third, George Khan wrote in this paper about Cedar Valley’s volunteer fire department. Eleven active members. Down from twenty-two three years ago. One truck where two used to roll. The oldest member is sixty-seven and has a bad knee he does not talk about. George services two of the department’s portable pumps himself. He rebuilt the pull-start on a rescue saw last fall.
Most of Cedar Valley read it. Some people sent messages. A few called the firehouse. Then the week moved on.
I did not let it move on. Because I am the mayor of this town, and what George described is a budget problem before it is anything else.
Two weeks after George’s editorial, I put a line item before the Cedar Valley town council: new medical response equipment for the volunteer department. An automated external defibrillator and a trauma kit with updated supplies. Total cost: four thousand two hundred dollars. The council voted. It passed.
The equipment is on order.
I want to tell you why I am writing about it this week. There is a town in Alabama called Pine Level, population just over one thousand. Volunteer fire department. This week, Mayor Bigley of Pine Level issued a proclamation for National Volunteer Firefighter Week. He issued it because something had just happened. Not long ago, Pine Level approved funding for new medical equipment for its department. Last month, a volunteer used it to save a life.
Mayor Bigley said what it meant plainly: a life was saved using equipment made possible by approved funding. Every dollar was worth it. You cannot put a price on a life.
I am a carpenter. I have built things with my hands and watched them hold or fail. The work tells you the truth. And the truth Pine Level is telling us is this: the vote in the room and the life in the field are connected by a chain shorter than it looks. The equipment we approved in Cedar Valley is not yet in the hands of our eleven volunteers. But it is coming. And when it arrives, it will be because this town made a decision in a meeting most of you did not attend.
I am not saying this to make anyone feel guilty. I am saying it because Cedar Valley deserves to know what its own decisions produce.
The eleven people standing between this town and whatever comes next in the middle of the night — they deserve to know it too. We have not said it loudly enough. National Volunteer Firefighter Week runs through Saturday. Cedar Valley’s volunteers do not hold press conferences. They do not post about the calls they run, the sleep they lose, or the training they complete on their own time with their own money. They just show up. Some of them have been showing up for twenty years. Some of them are watching the roster shrink and wondering how much longer the department can sustain itself.
I am watching too. There are more budget items coming. The department’s primary pump is twelve years old. The turnout gear worn by three of our volunteers is past its rated service life. These are not abstract concerns. They are the difference between a controlled response and a dangerous one. I will bring those items forward. I will ask Cedar Valley to vote on them. And I will tell you, every time, what the vote is for and what it means if it fails.
What I am asking today is simpler. Know who your eleven are. If you see them, say something. If you have ever thought about joining and kept putting it off, call the firehouse. If you have children old enough to volunteer, tell them what these people do.
Pine Level, Alabama knows what a vote is worth now. Cedar Valley should know it too, before we need a story like theirs to tell it.
If you know one of Cedar Valley’s volunteer firefighters or first responders, the Cedar Valley News Facebook group is where we can say so out loud. Come tell us who they are. https://bit.ly/40p8jKy
This editorial is part of the fictional Cedar Valley News series, written by Evan Swensen, Publisher, Publication Consultants, and Claude Marshall, AI Developmental Editor. While the people and town of Cedar Valley are fictional, Mayor Bigley, Pine Level, Alabama, and the events described there are real. The Cedar Valley fire department details referenced are drawn from George Khan’s March 3, 2026 editorial in this series.

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