I enjoy dramatic weather, such as a good thunderstorm, but yesterday afternoon things got a little too dramatic for comfort.
I arrived home around 4:15 to find my street full of fire trucks and police cars and people standing around watching the action. The house of one of my neighbors had been hit by lightning.
According to KTVZ’s account, the home of Deak and Barbara Preble was a total loss because of fire and smoke damage. Fortunately nobody was injured and the fire didn’t spread to any nearby houses (including mine).
“We're just pleased the authorities were able to get here fairly quickly,” Deak Preble told KTVZ’s reporter.
The experience got me thinking about what might have happened if we had privatized firefighting in Bend instead of having a municipal fire department.
Before you dismiss that as a ridiculous idea, remember that the private-enterprise approach to firefighting has been tried in many places throughout history. The results generally haven’t been very good.
In ancient Rome, Marcus Licinius Crassus – described by one website as “ambitious and an entrepreneur – the kind of man Ayn Rand might have appreciated” – made a fortune with his free-enterprise firefighting business. When a fire started in the city he’d rush to the scene, buy up the adjacent properties at bargain prices and then have his crew put the fire out.
In the late 17th century, London insurance companies started their own firefighting brigades. They wouldn’t put out a fire unless the owner of the blazing house had bought insurance, as indicated by a plaque mounted on the property.
In New York and other colonial American cities, insurance companies paid fire brigades to fight fires. Rival brigades would race each other to get to the scene first, and sometimes the building would burn down while the brigades fought over who would get to put out the fire.
What’s the point of all this? Simply that private enterprise doesn’t always do a better job than those much-despised (by conservatives and libertarians) public employees, and that privatizing public services isn’t always the best idea. Private enterprise, by definition, looks out for private interests, and those don’t always coincide with the public interest.
Arguments over political philosophy aside, I’m glad Bend has a well-paid professional city fire department – and I’m also glad we’re protected by professional city police instead of a crew of private sector rent-a-cops.
written by r74quinn , July 28, 2010
written by TJ , July 28, 2010
Your point about first-responder public employees is fine. I don't believe most people that you make your comments against would call for a private-enterprise approach to police, fire, 911 and EMS service. You must also note that the men and women in these fields consider their positions to be a calling and not just a job. Therefore, most of them will work above and beyond what is listed on their job description. This is not true of other government employees.
But I believe you shouldn't dismiss the notion of moving some current government functions to the private sector. Should the state run liquor stores? Why? Do people honestly believe that if we have private sector liquor stores it will result in countless drunks passed out in the streets with out the strong hand of government protecting us? We do have private trash companies in Bend that have to compete. Do we have piles of trash everywhere due to the fact that government workers are not performing this function? Hardly.
Just as some on the right should not believe in the notion that all government jobs should be eliminated, perhaps it wouldn't hurt you to reexamine the notion that the government can perform all functions with more efficiency and less waste that the private sector.
written by LarryDI , July 29, 2010
written by Thomas Clark , July 29, 2010
written by aaychbee'em critic , July 30, 2010
C'mon HBM, admit it. You're a ditto-head and you enjoy it.









