jeepmedic
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I am a LEO and a Paramedic and still got a ticket in an Ambulance. So I guess there is none.
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I am a LEO and a Paramedic and still got a ticket in an Ambulance. So I guess there is none.
I will never understand why ambulances get pulled over for speeding. Sorry, I know my views are unpopular on speeding ambulances. I think speeding ambulances can be an exceptions. All emergerncy vehicles should be. If the driver is doing something other than simply speeding like cutting people off and driving wrecklessly outside of speeding, okay than. I just have a real problem with cops pulling over rigs.
How often does this really happen? Seriously, I'm sure there are some police officers who would pull over an ambulance going code, but I personally have never seen it. Just for the record, I've been a cop for 27 years in a large metro area. I can honestly say that I have wanted to pull over some transport ambulances who are driving like mad when I know that the paramedics are already on scene, but I haven't personally done it. Now, off duty...well lets just say that professional courtesy exists, but it is not uniformly extended nor is it expected.
I have no idea how often it happens. Hopefully not much. I am responding to people who say it happend to them.
As I said, fast lane changes with car accidents left behind is not speeding. If an ambulance is causing destruction behind it is another story to a simple traffic infraction.
I thought maybe this has happened to you, since you have a problem with it. I guess that was just a hypothetical complaint.
O.K., I'll ask the group. How often do police pull over ambulances? Has anyone here been stopped while driving code to a call or enroute to the hospital? I'm asking as a legitimate question, not to challenge anyone. Is the problem work related or off duty?
How often do police pull over ambulances? Has anyone here been stopped while driving code to a call or enroute to the hospital? I'm asking as a legitimate question, not to challenge anyone. Is the problem work related or off duty?
Now, as to your assertion (emt007) that you would not ever pull over if directed to, you would quickly learn that your assumption of your legal rights would be quickly trumped by a dose of reality.
In other words, endangering the public is not in your job description.
After reading about the Ohio collision, reading about ambulance collisions and criminal driving cases involving EMTs and EMT-Ps on the EMS news wire almost daily and looking at the number of deaths caused by ambulance collisions each year, many at the fault of the person driving the ambulance, I have come to another conclusion. The LEOs aren't doing their job. They should be pulling over the ambulances that push it over their allowed speed limits and "roll" through the stop signs without due regard. Professional courtesy? NO! That goes for ambulance or POV. Dead is Dead. If a LEO can save one life even if it bruises someone's ego, so be it.
Respect the law and the LEOs. They may have something to say of great importance about the patient, vehicle disrepair or road conditions and not about your driving.
I may be hard core after 30 years in the medical profession, but as I mentioned before, the police probably have a good reason for their actions and ambulance accidents are never pretty. Sure there may be some serious egos pulling their weight in a LEO uniform. But, when matched with another inflated ego in an ambulance: Two Wrongs Will Never Make a Right.