The concept of mutual aid and assistance that Kevin Edwards believes in and
helped solidify into state law actually went a long way to saving his life after
a car accident in December 2009.
Edwards and his co-worker Roger Kruger were involved in a three-vehicle accident
on Interstate 80 on their way back home to Omaha after driving a friend to York,
NE, for the Christmas holidays. Kruger was killed in the accident, and Edwards
suffered a serious head injury. Both were Omaha firefighters at the time.
“I certainly owe my life to those who responded,” said Edwards. “They extricated
me from the vehicle and got me to the hospital in Lincoln.” Saddened about
Roger’s death, he said, he is alive today because of the responders’ actions. “I
would have frozen to death otherwise.” Emergency responders from the York County
Sheriff’s Office, the Nebraska State Patrol, and the communities of York, Waco,
and Utica aided at the scene.
The idea of fire departments and fire districts joining together to better
provide mutual aid and assistance is at the heart of the Mutual Finance
Assistance Fund established by the Nebraska Legislature in 1998. The program
provides aid to rural or suburban Fire Protection Districts (FPDs) and Mutual
Finance Organizations (MFOs) “for the purpose of financing operational and
equipment needs for fire protection, emergency response, or training.”
This fiscal year, $3.35 million will be distributed to 37 FPDs and MFOs,
according to the Treasury Management Division of the State Treasurer’s Office.
The amount is down $300,000 from the $3.65 million distributed last fiscal year.
The Mutual Finance Assistance Fund is a wonderful program that rewards rural
fire districts for “their cooperative spirits” and innovative thinking, says
Edwards, both an Omaha firefighter and fire chief of the Millard Suburban Fire
District, which qualifies for the state aid as a stand-alone district.
State aid to FPDs and MFOs has actually helped some rural fire districts lower
their tax levies, resulting in lower taxes for residents in those communities,
Edwards said. And the MFOs themselves have been excellent examples of what
small, “cash-strapped” government entities can do when they join forces and work
together to provide necessary services for their communities. The Mutual Finance
Assistance Fund allows fire districts to fulfill their community obligations,
while at the same time, in some cases, lower their tax levy rates, he said.
The Mutual Finance Assistance Fund also goes hand in hand with long-established
mutual aid agreements within and across counties that assure that all
departments involved will respond, with no questions asked, in extraordinary
circumstances, such as major accidents, explosions, hazardous material spills,
and weather-related emergencies.
While cooperation among agencies has been happening for years, Edwards said, the
Mutual Finance Assistance Fund “is a great program that allows those districts
to reap some rewards for being cooperative spirits and for thinking outside the
box, allowing them to reap the reward of state financial aid, and that helps the
taxpayer.”
Edwards, 50, started his career as a volunteer firefighter in his hometown of
Ulysses, where his father, Burt, was volunteer fire chief for many years. The
younger Edwards also worked as an EMT for the York County ambulance service and
as a firefighter in Richardson, TX. He has been a firefighter, captain, and
battalion chief in the Millard Suburban Fire District and, since 1998, has been
in charge of the district’s budget. The district now contracts with the City of
Omaha for fire and EMS services.
Edwards has been involved in the Mutual Finance Assistance Fund since the
beginning, working with state senators in the 1990s to find ways to encourage
local fire departments and fire districts to work together to eliminate
duplication of efforts and resources. The result was the Mutual Finance
Assistance Fund. Edwards is particularly proud of guiding Logan County officials
through the process of qualifying for the aid in 2005, using documents found on
the Nebraska State Treasurer’s Office website, in time to meet a July 1
deadline.
Logan County Clerk Pat Harvey said the state aid has been very helpful to the
county, enabling the volunteer firefighters to purchase equipment they wouldn’t
otherwise be able to afford. They have purchased new firefighter clothing,
“bunker gear” including helmets, and recertification of air bottles. “We are
very grateful for our young firefighters,” she said.