emt301

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About emt301

  • Birthday 04/03/1966

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  • Location East Fishkill (Dutchess County, NY)
  • Agency Dutchess County 911
  1. Rayrider, Law states to move over if safe to do so - otherwise, SLOW DOWN and don't go blasting on by the emergency vehicle. Really, it's not rocket science.
  2. You can probably add 911/Public Safety Dispatcher to the list of most stressful jobs too...
  3. Exactly. Civility is the issue here, not censorship. I agree that a good debate is welcome, but that personal attacks and bashing...whether by direct "frontal assault", or by implied subtle negative/sarcastic comments...shouldn't be welcome here. It has nothing to do with whether or not people here have thick skins... anyone that's in the emergency services has a thick skin already just to do the job...but this is supposed to be an environment for disucssion, learning, and debate...not negativity and antagonism.
  4. From all reports it certainly looks like the 911 dispatcher screwed up in this incident, and this mistake certainly may have contributed to the officers fate. It's a true tragedy for all involved. However, I'm wondering why the "I find a lot of dispatchers are lazy" remark. Doesn't seem to accomplish anything positive here. There are plenty of lazy folks out there in ALL fields of employment, in both the public and private sector, in all fields. Most of us have come across them at some point in our lives. Yes, this unfortunately includes some dispatchers, and yes, unfortunately, even some firefighters, cops, & EMS workers too. What I think we need to remember here is that the majority of dispatchers out there really care about doing the job well, just as do the majority of our brother/sister firefighters, police officers, and EMS workers.
  5. EMS is handled by surrounding agencies. Crash/Rescue responsibilities fall upon the airport operations staff (members of IAFF local I-62, at least as of 2001 when I was last working there), with mutual aid dispatched as deemed necessary by the aiport supervisor on duty. A member of the airport operations staff serves as incident commander on all aircraft incidents occuring on the airport property. Structural & other types of fires are handled by surrounding mutual aid departments, with their departmental officers in charge of the incident. The airport crash/rescue trucks will sometimes make an intial/first response to the scene on these non-aircraft related incidents.
  6. Congratulations to Dave, Monique, Marty, and Mohegan FD !!!!
  7. Sounds good - but unfortunately $50,000 to start seems to be the exception rather than the rule. Most dispatching jobs I'm familiar with start between about $28,000-$36,000, and you don't reach $50,000 until you've been on the job for a few years (and some don't even reach $50,000 at top pay !!!).
  8. Speaking with the perspective of having been a weather forecaster for a number of years, these rounds of frequent springtime thunderstorms actually happen every few to several years here in the Hudson Valley, with quieter years in between. You probably don't recall (being the young guy that you are , but in May of 1998 we had a few rounds of severe thunderstorms, and the same thing happened again in May/June of either 2000 or 2001 (don't remember exactly which year, as I was at training in Salt Lake City both years, but my wife told me about the storms & I saw them on the weather channel). We had frequent storms once again during the Summer of either 2004 or 2005 (again, my memory is fading, but it was one of those 2 summers). Bottom line, after we go though a couple of "quiet" years, we get a busy year and it seems like the weather is getting much worse, but it really isn't. It's just cyclical.
  9. There was a situation here in Dutchess a year or two ago, where a helicopter was requested for a reported motorcycle accident on one of the area highways. The helicopter was requested by a responding unit...before any FD/EMS/PD personnel had actually arrived on scene for a size-up. It ended up being a disabled motorcycle - a motorcycle that had run out of gas. Seems to me that someone (FD/EMS/PD) needs to actually assess the scene before a helicopter is put on standby or launched - this was a total waste of a valuable resource, a resource that someone else may have legitimately needed at the same time.
  10. D.A. Difiore really dropped the ball with all of the plea deals. Kudos to the Detective for speaking the truth. If the people of Westchester are lucky, the D.A. won't get re-elected next time - someone who's actually tough on crime will get into office.
  11. Speaking as a former Westchester Cty Airport Ops/ARFF member, I wish everyone best of luck with the upcoming drill - hopefully the changes in the plan are proven effective !!
  12. TL2L31, No offense intended - but - if we follow this logic, then the standard "non-airport" initial 1st alarm assignment for smoke coming from a building or a possible structure fire should really be the equivalent of a 2nd or 3rd alarm assignment because the surrounding buildings, woods, cars, fields, outhouses, and any other exposures...might...be threatened. Really just doesn't make sense. The airport already responds with 2 crash trucks - with those units already enroute or on scene, I still think a tiered response from the surrounding departments is the way to go - there's no need to strip most of the fire protection from the areas surrounding the airport due to an inbound Cessna having problems. Obviously if it's a larger aircraft - i.e. more passengers & more fuel - then a larger response is certainly justified.