LashL
Goddess of Legaltainment™
- Joined
- Aug 12, 2006
- Messages
- 36,711
Toronto is a much larger department than Seattle.
They have 2,900 staff. Seattle had 1005 in my last year there.
Toronto looks to have 80 plus stations. Seattle had 33 when I was there.
In 2005 Toronto had 140,516 incidents. Only 7% of those were fire calls - not actual fires. I could not find a number for actual fires versus false alarms.
In 2001 Seattle had 73,677 responses. 1,736 of those were fires. In addition to that Seattle had 6059 false alarms.
You can question my original numbers if you want but that is just foolishness on your part.
I will most certainly check your numbers, Russell. That is not “foolishness”. It is in my nature to be accurate and not just take what someone says as gospel without verifying the facts and evidence. You should try it some time.
(Plus, you have repeatedly demonstrated a tendency to compare apples and oranges and I suspect that you are doing so again here.)
BTW, I am well aware that firefighters are called to all manner of events, not just fires. In Toronto, they get dispatched to medical events, elevator rescues, alarm calls, vehicle extrications, and various and sundry other types of events. Nobody has ever suggested that fire departments do nothing but go to fire calls.
I specified well involved or fully involved fires. I went to numerous room fires and smaller events. In Seattle you may be at a station that was overstaffed. So every third or fourth shift you go work at another station that needs personnel. On debit days you work at other stations. With shift trades and overtime you will eventually work all over the city to average out the differences in fire events usually based on income brackets.
As usual, Russell, you change the topic or move the goalposts in order to deflect from the actual issues at hand. The fact that you personally never worked any major fires speaks only to your own lack of knowledge and experience with such fires. You’re assuming a lot if you think that fire events are “usually” based on income brackets. While that may be applicable in Seattle, it is not necessarily true in other cities. For instance, some of the most expensive real estate in all of Canada is located in the downtown core of Toronto, and that is also where the busiest station and the busiest trucks are. Go look up the stats for station 331 which I’ve twice previously directed you to after you inquired about my partner’s station – there you’ll see some serious numbers. While we're on that topic, please tell me what your primary station in Seattle was.
If you average out the number of fires, the number of shifts and the fact that you work 24 hours in different first-in districts in the size of a city like Seattle the first-in well involved or fully involved structure fires are about 5 per year.
Seattle doesn’t have many fires - I don’t dispute that. The fact that it has so few is probably part of the reason why your knowledge and experience appear to be so limited.
The other thing your ignorance is leading you to foolishly believe is that first-in is all you get. NO. In a full response you have a second and third arriving engine company too. I was on many of those as well. But by the time you get to most of those the initial knock down is finished and I didn't count that.
Huh? It’s not ignorance on my part. We were not talking about being first in or being part of a subsequent company. Why you think that I made the assumptions that you are alluding to, I’ve no idea. I am fully aware of the fact that trucks are often cleared from a fire event without even getting to the location, let alone having to actually fully engage in a particular event. You are again spouting nonsense that has nothing to do with the issues at hand and pretending that it is relevant.
I have tried to leave most of this rest but since you want to display your lack of knowledge for all to see I will go into more detail for you.
No, it’s not a lack of knowledge on my part. It’s just more obfuscation and avoiding issues on your part. As usual.
The percentages of fires in metropolitan departs tends to average out and be similar for departments that do both EMS and fires.
Source, please.
Fully involved structure fires are the exception and not the rule.
Nobody has ever said otherwise. Are you suggesting that someone has?
I know it is the nature of attorneys (if you really are one) to win no matter what, but you should just quit while you are behind.
It is the nature of good lawyers, like myself, to be thorough, to consult appropriate sources, to consult appropriate professionals in their respective fields as required, to research matters of fact and law fully, to seek out not only information that supports the client’s position but also information that contradicts the client’s position, and to assess all of it critically. (In fact, I’d go so far as to say that seeking out information that contradicts the client’s position is just as, if not more, important than seeking out information that supports the client’s position.)
If the facts and evidence do not support my client’s position, I advise the client accordingly and make the appropriate recommendations. If the client insists upon pursuing litigation in a matter upon which the facts and the law do not support the client’s position, I get written instructions to proceed despite my recommendations. So, again, you’re wrong – it’s not about “winning no matter what”. It’s about representing a client’s interests to the best of your ability and doing so honourably, professionally and ethically.
In my personal life, I operate much the same way. On any given topic, I like to be thorough, to consult appropriate sources, to consult professionals, to look for information on various sides of a topic that is contentious, and to assess all of it critically in order to come to a conclusion.
It’s not about “winning” – it’s about thinking critically, exploring various dissenting views, assessing the facts and evidence and coming to a reasonable conclusion as a result. You should try it some time.
NOTE TO OTHERS ON THE THREAD: I haven’t yet caught up with all of the posts but I apologize for the fact that some of my posts here have served only to give Russell the opportunity he wanted to ignore all of your legitimate questions that are actually on topic.