Why do the fire stations, notably Dunkirk and Huntingtown, still wail the siren every time they get a call?
There has to be a better way to call volunteers......
Think it's just tradition?
Why do the fire stations, notably Dunkirk and Huntingtown, still wail the siren every time they get a call?
There has to be a better way to call volunteers......
Think it's just tradition?
Why do the fire stations, notably Dunkirk and Huntingtown, still wail the siren every time they get a call?
There has to be a better way to call volunteers......
Think it's just tradition?
Not every VOLUNTEER in SOMDs ALL VOLUNTEER force may have their beeper with them...different tones indicate different types of calls..so the sirens are used to call members to that station. Not a tradition as the tones originate at the 911 center, not the station.
Then why would only a couple of stations still use them? Most don't.
They are a throwback, and they are used or not at the will of the FD, not the county.
Tones originate at Control Center..ask them.
Stations can turn their sirens off...but tones still sound triggering sirens.
Why do the fire stations, notably Dunkirk and Huntingtown, still wail the siren every time they get a call?
There has to be a better way to call volunteers......
Think it's just tradition?
I grew up across the street from our volunteer FD. They still blow the whistle at noon, except on weekends. I actually look forward to it when I'm there visiting. When the siren blows in the middle of the night for an emergency, I still run to the picture window to watch the trucks depart. Strange, I know :/
The sirens also alert the public that there is an emergency and to be watchful of responding equipment.
MMDad;5189853Then why would only a couple of stations still use them? Most don't. They are a throwback said:Because the other ones stopped due to the complaints of all the dumb #### rural pioneers that moved here from the more enlightened parts of MD. The sirens offended them. The same way tractors, the Amish, hunting, the watermen, the no streetlights or sidewalks on rural roads, no "trendy" restaurants, no gourmet coffee shoppes and most local businesses do.
Because the other ones stopped due to the complaints of all the dumb #### rural pioneers that moved here from the more enlightened parts of MD. The sirens offended them. The same way tractors, the Amish, hunting, the watermen, the no streetlights or sidewalks on rural roads, no "trendy" restaurants, no gourmet coffee shoppes and most local businesses do.
From talking to a former chief of one local department, I know that their decision was based on the cost to keep the siren working weighed against the fact that the siren was not an effective way to call the volunteers. It had nothing to do with complaints.
Is there any reason to keep the sirens other than "that's the way we've always done it? I'm not buying the "alerting traffic they're coming out" since there's at least a couple of minutes delay after the siren ends. In that time the traffic that heard the siren is long gone, and has been replaced by traffic that had no warning.
From talking to a former chief of one local department, I know that their decision was based on the cost to keep the siren working weighed against the fact that the siren was not an effective way to call the volunteers. It had nothing to do with complaints.