12/17/24 Manhattan All Hands 10-77 Box 0795

Joined
Aug 5, 2015
Messages
4,367
Address: 127 West 43rd St. off 6th Ave.

Fire on the 12th floor of a 12 story 144x100 class 1 MD (SRO)

Box after initial - Reporting a fire on the 12th floor - 15:42

B-9: Transmit the 10-77 - Fire on the 12th floor - 15:51

L-2 FAST, E-21 HRN, E-34 CFR, E-3 w/ HR-1, B-6 Safety

B-9: We have (1) 10-45 no code - 15:54

B-9: All Hands - 1 L/S/O - 15:58

B-9: We're currently doing CPR on the 10-45, put a rush on EMS - 16:01

B-9: Under Control - 16:11

Duration: 31 Min.

B-9: The 10-45 is a code 2 - 16:14

Maybe:
E-65, 26, 54, 1, 21N, 34C
L-4, 24, 2F, 21, 7
B-9, 8, 7, 6S
R-1
SQ-18
D-3
FC, RB, SB
E-3 w/ HR-1
RAC-3, RM

Relocations:
E-74 to E-54
E-229 to E-21
E-91 to E-1
E-219 to E-3
E-67 to E-34
L-16 to L-2
L-108 to L-24
L-8 to L-4
L-115 to L-7
B-2 to B-9
B-12 to B-8
B-28 to B-7
 
Last edited:
I agree, so why does Fire ask for a rush on EMS?
I personally always drive as rapidly as is safe, as you never know what's going on. But, with that said I'm not going to start driving even faster and becoming reckless if someone is asking for a rush. Unfortunately, NYPD in particular seems to use the phrase inappropriately. While I don't think it's malice on their part, they do seem to use it on incidents where it's not warranted, a disproportionate amount.
 
Last edited:
Maybe it can be used more safely to get EMS Dispatch to re prioritize the Run (assigning a Bus sooner ) rather than thinking the actual EMS Driver will speed up ?
That was always my kind of thinking, especially if we got sent on a seg 3 type run that ended up being a seg 1. Considering when we tell
Our dispatchers of a need for ems or updated conditions, they ask the condition of the patient for ems. If all runs were treated the same, that question wouldnt be necessary.
 
Back
Top