Lone Rock Volunteer Fire Protection District

Lone Rock Volunteer Fire Protection District The Lone Rock VFD is full of caring people who dedicate their personal time to serve their community

Homemade bread, salad, homemade desserts, bbq chicken and more
04/11/2026

Homemade bread, salad, homemade desserts, bbq chicken and more

Come see our new brush truck and sign and eat a delicious bbq chicken meal while supporting our volunteer fire departmen...
04/11/2026

Come see our new brush truck and sign and eat a delicious bbq chicken meal while supporting our volunteer fire department

04/07/2026
This Saturday!
04/07/2026

This Saturday!

We are proud to introduce our new Chief Earnest Malloy!Employed by City of Salesville as Fire Chief for the last 4 years...
03/31/2026

We are proud to introduce our new Chief Earnest Malloy!

Employed by City of Salesville as Fire Chief for the last 4 years
Certified Instructor 1 with the Arkansas Fire Academy
Lifelong resident of Lone Rock
Married for the last 15 years to my wife Nikki who is employed with Baxter Health as a EMT, 3 children. Army Veteran with a deployment to Iraq from 07-09.

The people of Lone Rock deserve the best and I hope to bring that to them. My goal is to bring the community back into the fire department and give them assurance that when they call 911 someone will be coming to help.

03/21/2026

Save the Date! Our Spring Event will be Saturday, April 11 from 11-1. BBQ chicken, your choice of side, homemade bread, dessert and drink $10. To Go Plates available.

Where has the readiness to serve gone?  Volunteers urgently needed!
02/26/2026

Where has the readiness to serve gone? Volunteers urgently needed!

Where Has the Readiness to Serve Gone?
Where has the pride in the fire service gone?
Where is the readiness?
Where is the heart?
Across rural America, the bay doors of small volunteer fire departments sit quieter than they should. The pagers still go off. The tones still drop. The smoke still rises over barns, homes, fields, and highways.
But fewer and fewer are answering.
Over 70% of fire departments in the United States are volunteer-based. That means in most small towns, when your worst day happens, it’s not a big city engine company coming from down the street. It’s your neighbor pulling on boots after a 10-hour shift. It’s a rancher leaving cattle in the pasture. It’s a mom or dad kissing their kids goodbye at the dinner table because someone else’s family needs help.
These departments protect: • The homes your grandparents built
• The schools your children attend
• The churches you pray in
• The farms and ranches that feed this country
• The back roads where wrecks happen at midnight
So why are so many departments struggling?
Why are rosters shrinking?
Why are training nights empty?
Why are good departments fighting just to keep the doors open?
Is it fear of the unknown?
Is it inconvenience?
Have we grown too comfortable waiting for someone else to step up?
Volunteer service isn’t about flashing lights or social media recognition. It’s about sweat in turnout gear. It’s about crawling down a smoke-filled hallway not knowing what’s in front of you. It’s about performing CPR on someone you might know personally. It’s about standing in freezing rain at 2 a.m. directing traffic so others make it home safely.
It’s heart. It’s grit. It’s sacrifice.
Small departments don’t just need bodies — they need commitment. They need members who train hard. Who show up. Who take pride in the patch on their sleeve. Who understand that being on the roster means more than carrying a pager — it means carrying responsibility.
Because when volunteer numbers drop and stations close, emergencies don’t stop happening. Fires still burn. Hearts still fail. Wrecks still happen.
The only difference is help comes from farther away.
And in this line of work, minutes are everything.
A longer response time can mean: • A house fully involved instead of a room saved
• A field fire spreading beyond control
• A patient not getting oxygen soon enough
• A life not making it
That is the reality.
These communities — your community — deserve protection. They deserve neighbors willing to stand in the gap. They deserve sirens that respond quickly, not from two counties away.
If you have ever said, “Someone should do something”…
Maybe that someone is you.
You don’t have to be fearless.
You don’t have to be perfect.
You just have to care enough to step forward.
Volunteer. Train. Show up. Be present. Be reliable. Be proud.
Because one day, when that siren echoes across the fields, it may be headed toward your home… your parents… your spouse… your child.
And when that day comes, you will want to know that someone answered the call.
Let’s bring back the pride.
Let’s bring back the readiness.
Let’s bring back the heart.
Our communities are worth it.

The Lone Rock Volunteer Fire Department is accepting sealed bids for this 1996 Dodge 3500, ¾ ton with flat bed, auto tra...
02/25/2026

The Lone Rock Volunteer Fire Department is accepting sealed bids for this 1996 Dodge 3500, ¾ ton with flat bed, auto transmission, V10, 4wd with 114,569 miles. The truck can be seen at Lone Rock VFD and will need some TLC. Please send your bid for this “AS IS” truck in a sealed envelope by March 31, 2026 to Lone Rock VFD, 8442 Push Mountain Rd. Norfork, AR 72658. Bids will be opened at the following commissioners meeting and highest bidder will be notified the following business day. If you have any questions, please contact Chief Dennis at 870-916-8047.

02/22/2026

The Forestry Service will be conducting a prescribed burn in Baxter County today, located east of Hwy 341, north of Hwy 14.

Smoke may be visible from Hwy 14, Hwy 341, communities of Advance, Fifty-Six, and Mountain View.
Temporary road closures may take place on Barkshed Road, Cripple Turkey Road, and Merrill Ridge Road.


Trail Closures
The Ozark Highlands Trail from Cripple Turkey Trailhead to Brushy Creek Trailhead will remain closed until further notice due to planned prescribed fire operations.
The North Sylamore Creek Trail between Barkshed Campground and Gunner Pool Campground will remain closed until further notice.

Address

Norfork, AR
72658

Website

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