Three Greene County Volunteer Fire Departments are among a group of 245 statewide who will receive a total of $10 million dollars in grants .
The Tennessee Department of Commerce & Insurance and the Tennessee State Fire Marshal’s Office made the announcement Thursday.
The Debusk , St. James and Tusculum Volunteer Fire Departments will receive funds through the Volunteer Firefighter Equipment and Training Grant Program.
The grants are used by volunteer departments to purchase firefighting equipment or help meet local matching requirements for federal equipment grants.
Two other area fire departments who are mutual aid partners with Greene County, Parrottsville and Fall Branch Volunteer Fire Departments, will also share in the grants.
Since the program’s launch in 2020, grants totaling $26.5 million have been provided to Tennessee volunteer fire departments in all three of Tennessee’s three Grand Divisions.
“Governor Lee and the General Assembly are committed to helping departments get the funding they need to help keep their firefighters safe,” said TDCI Commissioner and State Fire Marshal Carter Lawrence. “It is my honor to help serve the Tennessee fire service so that they can save lives and protect property across Tennessee.”
Volunteer fire departments are crucial to providing fire safety as over 73% of Tennessee’s fire departments are staffed entirely by volunteers. Out of Tennessee’s 21,075 active firefighters, an estimated 12,460 are volunteers which accounts for over 59%.
“Volunteer fire departments are the backbone of fire protection in our communities, and it is crucial that they have the equipment they need to safely complete their mission,” said Assistant Commissioner for Fire Prevention Mike Bell. “I encourage Tennessee’s volunteer fire departments to remember they can always reach out to me or the members of SFMO should they ever have any questions about the grant program or any of our work to support Tennessee’s volunteer fire departments.”
During the application period (Nov. 1 – Nov. 27, 2024), the SFMO received 325 applications from Tennessee fire departments. The applications were reviewed, scored, and submitted to a seven-member committee for the final award selection.





