- Reaction score
- 265
- Points
- 980
Ladies and gents, in this age of mobile phones and during this season of snow and ice emergency services are frequently activated for legitimate emergency events where life and death are sometimes seconds apart. Often we are alerted to car accidents by a passer by and their mobile phone and we wish to continue to see this sort of thing happen, of course.
In my neighborhood, where I volunteer as a firefighter, we cover approximately 25 kilomteres of four lane highway in our own district and provide support to four other fire departments for the JAWS of Life service for their bits of highway and secondary roads. So when someone hits the rhubarb on icy roads we have to first get ourselves to the fire station on the same icy roads that someone just bailed off of and then drive emergency apparatus over said icy roads to the same spot where someone hit the tools, see where I am going here? It's dangerous.
So, it gets a little frustrating when we get a call, get to the station and then drive all over hell's half acre only to find out that the car accident is nowhere to be found (which we are happy about, of course) because someone called it in on their cellphone but couldn't be arsed enough to stop and see if people are okay. Yeah, you're doing a service but you should think about the service you are doing and the ramifications of your being in too much of a hurry to stop your car and make a safe cell phone call on roads that already saw someone slide off of them.
And not only do we face the risk of tackling these roads but you face risk as well. Why? Because if your house catches fire or you slide off the road while we are chasing another, non existant, accident guess where that leaves you? It leaves you waiting for another department to respond to your legitimate emergency while we chase geese. And it CAN happen.
According to a cop buddy of mine (and I'd love to have someone expand on this for me if you have the legit info) they do have the means to charge you for such a thing. Leaving the scene or something tied to that? As said, I get this second hand and the conversation was a while ago. But is that what it has to come to?
So please, if you witness or come across a wreck on the roads: stop safely, call 911 if it is needed and wait to see if you are needed to help.
Thanks
In my neighborhood, where I volunteer as a firefighter, we cover approximately 25 kilomteres of four lane highway in our own district and provide support to four other fire departments for the JAWS of Life service for their bits of highway and secondary roads. So when someone hits the rhubarb on icy roads we have to first get ourselves to the fire station on the same icy roads that someone just bailed off of and then drive emergency apparatus over said icy roads to the same spot where someone hit the tools, see where I am going here? It's dangerous.
So, it gets a little frustrating when we get a call, get to the station and then drive all over hell's half acre only to find out that the car accident is nowhere to be found (which we are happy about, of course) because someone called it in on their cellphone but couldn't be arsed enough to stop and see if people are okay. Yeah, you're doing a service but you should think about the service you are doing and the ramifications of your being in too much of a hurry to stop your car and make a safe cell phone call on roads that already saw someone slide off of them.
And not only do we face the risk of tackling these roads but you face risk as well. Why? Because if your house catches fire or you slide off the road while we are chasing another, non existant, accident guess where that leaves you? It leaves you waiting for another department to respond to your legitimate emergency while we chase geese. And it CAN happen.
According to a cop buddy of mine (and I'd love to have someone expand on this for me if you have the legit info) they do have the means to charge you for such a thing. Leaving the scene or something tied to that? As said, I get this second hand and the conversation was a while ago. But is that what it has to come to?
So please, if you witness or come across a wreck on the roads: stop safely, call 911 if it is needed and wait to see if you are needed to help.
Thanks