Fee for emergency services in the United States
In the United States , an emergency response fee , also known as fire department charge , fire department service charge , accident response fee ,[ 1] [ 2] accident fee ,[ 3] Traffic Infraction Accident Fee ,[ 4] ambulance fee ,[ 5] etc., and pejoratively as a crash tax [ 6] is a fee for emergency services such as firefighting , emergency medical services , environmental response , etc., performed by a local fire department , EMTs, police department , etc., at the scene of a structure fire , wildfire , traffic collision , or other emergency , billed afterward to the surviving property owner or owner(s), operator(s) of the vehicle (s) involved, and/or their insurance companies.
Many states and localities have approved these fees. Many states and localities prohibit these fees.[ 7]
Some fire departments charge small and large fees for firefighting.[ 8] Some bill the survivors, some bill the insurance companies of the survivors.[ 9]
Some fire departments charge an advance fire subscription fee for fire protection. They often do not fight fires that are not covered, refusing offers of back payment.[ 10] [ 11]
The fees are controversial, with multiple arguments for and against.[ 12]
References
^ "Accident Response Fees" . www.accidentresponsefees.com . Retrieved 2023-01-01 .
^ "The Blade | Toledo's breaking news, sports, and entertainment watchdog" . The Blade . Retrieved 2023-01-01 .
^ Cusenza, Michael. "Accident fee is not a 'crash tax' — FDNY" . Queens Chronicle . Retrieved 2023-01-01 .
^ "Washington State Courts - JIS-Link" . www.courts.wa.gov . Retrieved 2023-01-01 .
^ DiGangi, Christine. "This man's 2-mile ambulance ride cost $2,700. Is that normal?" . USA TODAY . Retrieved 2023-01-01 .
^ Barnes, Ed (2015-03-25). "Accident Victims Increasingly Being Hit Again -- With 'Crash Taxes' " . Fox News . Retrieved 2023-01-01 .
^ "StackPath" . www.vehicleservicepros.com . Retrieved 2023-01-01 .
^ "Firefighters Charge Family Nearly $20,000 After Home Burns Down" . HuffPost . 2013-11-08. Retrieved 2023-01-01 .
^ NETTER, SARAH. "Fire Departments Charge for Service, Asking Accident Victims to Pay Up" . ABC News . Retrieved 2023-01-01 .
^ "No pay, no spray: Firefighters let home burn" . NBC News . Retrieved 2023-01-01 .
^ Fire Subscription Services: A Legal and Moral Conundrum - Fire Engineering
^ Jensen, Christopher (2010-09-03). "A Crash. A Call for Help. Then, a Bill" . The New York Times . ISSN 0362-4331 . Retrieved 2023-01-01 .