Hey guys. Well, I've wanted to be a paramedic since before I could drive and I always knew that I wanted the best driving record possible, for obvious reasons. So since I started driving I have followed all laws and have never gotten a single ticket. I did get pulled over once though for expired tabs but I explained that I was actually on my way to pick up new ones and I had just got paid. ANYWAYS
Yesterday my cousin and I were on our lunch break and we were going down one of the main streets in town and there are two lanes going in each direction and a center turn lane. I was stopped in the center turn lane to go left and was waiting for peds in the Xwalk for about 30-45 seconds (there were quite a few of them). So I was about 5 feet behind the crosswalk since most people are usually halfway past it and the peds clear out and I move my car forward about 5 feet so I am now just to the crosswalk and I am waiting for another ped to cross the street in the road I am going to turn onto and all of the sudden,WHAM!
I don't know if the guy behind me assumed I was going to keep going or what but he got me pretty good. I drive a Cavalier and he was in a 99 Chevy 4x4 and my trunk was about halfway up my back window and my bumper pretty much broke into about 7 pieces. His air bag didn't even diploy and the only damage he really got was a broken license plate frame.
So here is where some of my questions come in......
#1) I've seen several EMT applications and every one that I have read has asked if I had been in an accident within the past 3 years. Should this affect my chances at all? The L.E.O. said that it was in no way my fault since I was waiting for a pedestrian. And on top of that the guy that rear-ends someone else is usually at fault anyway just for the fact that he shouldn't have been following so close.
#2) I dialed 911 but I felt pretty guilty in doing so because I know that at any point there could be a serious injury somewhere else and the dispatch would be busy talking to me about a fender bender. As an afterthough should I have dialed the operator and asked for the city police station? I just told the dispatch I was in a minor accident and not to send a bus or truck.
#3) My neck is KILLING ME! Ha, I know pretty much everybody claims the infamous lawsuit/neck injury after getting hit from behind so I did't complain. And I didn't feel it until much later, but I guess I got a pretty good first hand lesson on the type of neck injuries one can get from a real accident. They claimed to only be doing 5 mph so I can only imagine what a good 35 would do.
All in all I guess I came out ahead since I learned a couple of things. lol.
Yesterday my cousin and I were on our lunch break and we were going down one of the main streets in town and there are two lanes going in each direction and a center turn lane. I was stopped in the center turn lane to go left and was waiting for peds in the Xwalk for about 30-45 seconds (there were quite a few of them). So I was about 5 feet behind the crosswalk since most people are usually halfway past it and the peds clear out and I move my car forward about 5 feet so I am now just to the crosswalk and I am waiting for another ped to cross the street in the road I am going to turn onto and all of the sudden,WHAM!
I don't know if the guy behind me assumed I was going to keep going or what but he got me pretty good. I drive a Cavalier and he was in a 99 Chevy 4x4 and my trunk was about halfway up my back window and my bumper pretty much broke into about 7 pieces. His air bag didn't even diploy and the only damage he really got was a broken license plate frame.
So here is where some of my questions come in......
#1) I've seen several EMT applications and every one that I have read has asked if I had been in an accident within the past 3 years. Should this affect my chances at all? The L.E.O. said that it was in no way my fault since I was waiting for a pedestrian. And on top of that the guy that rear-ends someone else is usually at fault anyway just for the fact that he shouldn't have been following so close.
#2) I dialed 911 but I felt pretty guilty in doing so because I know that at any point there could be a serious injury somewhere else and the dispatch would be busy talking to me about a fender bender. As an afterthough should I have dialed the operator and asked for the city police station? I just told the dispatch I was in a minor accident and not to send a bus or truck.
#3) My neck is KILLING ME! Ha, I know pretty much everybody claims the infamous lawsuit/neck injury after getting hit from behind so I did't complain. And I didn't feel it until much later, but I guess I got a pretty good first hand lesson on the type of neck injuries one can get from a real accident. They claimed to only be doing 5 mph so I can only imagine what a good 35 would do.
All in all I guess I came out ahead since I learned a couple of things. lol.