Rural residents in Grayson County, Texas, could lose fire and EMS coverage from Sherman Fire Rescue as a simmering funding dispute between city and county officials reaches a breaking point.
The issue resurfaced at a March 2 Sherman City Council meeting, where officials openly questioned whether the city should continue subsidizing emergency responses in unincorporated areas that refuse to pay for them.
Sherman Fire Rescue handled roughly 8,500 calls for service in 2025. About 600 of those were in unincorporated parts of Grayson County, areas outside city limits where Sherman taxpayers are effectively footing the bill. As reported by EMS1, the city is currently paying $30,000 a month to help cover the cost, and officials say they have until October to find a workable solution before the current arrangement collapses.
A Sales Tax That Voters Didn't Want
The backstory matters. In the fall of 2025, voters in unincorporated areas of Grayson County rejected a proposed sales tax that would have created a dedicated funding stream for fire and EMS services across the county. Sherman Fire Chief Billy Hartsfield framed the stakes plainly:
"That would have brought about a new funding mechanism and possibly a new way of reimbursing fire and EMS services throughout the county for how they do their work."
They voted it down. And now the city that sends trucks to their doorsteps is asking a reasonable question: why should Sherman residents keep paying for a service that the people receiving it declined to fund?
Council members noted that some rural residents indicated they would rather call a medical helicopter themselves than pay a sales tax. That tells you everything about where the political will stands outside city limits.
The Math Doesn't Work
Council Member Pamela Howeth said the current arrangement is unsustainable and suggested the city consider raising service rates so Sherman residents are not subsidizing emergency responses in rural areas. Council Member Clay Barnett floated a different model: contracting directly with individual residents who want the service, cutting the county out of the equation entirely.
Both ideas reflect the same underlying reality. A city of finite resources cannot indefinitely absorb the cost of protecting areas that contribute nothing to its budget. At $30,000 a month, Sherman is spending $360,000 a year responding to roughly 600 calls in places where the beneficiaries voted against chipping in.
Hartsfield, for his part, described the current contract as nothing new:
"This is just a continuation of the contract we've always had in place with Grayson County."
That may be true. But "the way it's always been" is not a funding model. It's inertia.
Who Pays for Services Nobody Wants to Fund?
This is a story that plays out in counties across America, and it exposes a tension that local governments rarely resolve cleanly. Rural residents want services. They don't want the taxes that fund them. City residents, meanwhile, watch their tax dollars flow outward to people who choose not to participate in the system.
The conservative instinct here is straightforward: services cost money, and the people who use them should bear the cost. There is no right to someone else's fire department. Sherman's taxpayers built their fire and EMS infrastructure for Sherman. Extending that coverage to unincorporated areas was always a courtesy, not an obligation.
When voters in those areas had the chance to create a sustainable funding mechanism and said no, they made a choice. Choices have consequences. Expecting Sherman to absorb those consequences indefinitely is not self-reliance. It's free-riding dressed up as rural independence.
What Comes Next
The October deadline gives both sides roughly seven months to negotiate. The options on the table, including higher service rates, direct-to-resident contracts, or some renegotiated county deal, all require someone to pay more than they're paying now. The only question is who.
If no agreement materializes, Sherman could simply stop responding to calls outside its jurisdiction. That would be a serious outcome for families living in unincorporated areas with no alternative coverage. Emergency response is not something you improvise. A structure fire does not wait for a helicopter.
But the burden of solving this does not rest on Sherman's shoulders alone. Grayson County leaders need to present their residents with an honest choice: fund the services you depend on, or accept that those services may disappear. There is no third option where someone else quietly picks up the tab.
The voters spoke in 2025. Now they get to live with what they said.

