Seems another person wants to pull a post right after making comments. While this has occurred in the past, it really is frustrating to make a reply and time to post a reply just to have the thread disappear.
I am referring to a thread posted by T.O.Tyson in regards to a suicidal man who drowned himself in the San Francisco bay while crews watched. The article refers to budget cuts and policy as the reasoning first responders stood by to watch the man die.
The intial title was that San Francisco Firefighters just stood by, but the incident occurred in Alameda, which is across the bay from San Francisco. I pointed this aspect out to the OP to show that the dept he is referring to had nothing to do with the incident.
I'm guessing that what made the thread disappear was the question of "what would you do", with the OP's response as "policy be damned". For that I inquired as to if freelancing is thus acceptable and so on. I mentioned that an incident, such as this, is easy to Monday morning QB because hindsight is 20/20, we also have the luxury of knowing the outcome etc, but were NOT in the same place.
Another poster did get a post in before said thread disappeared with the gist that "something could of been done, or at least talked to the person" etc and even going into a "policy be damned" approach. It was during my response to this, I noticed the thread was thus pulled. So this was my reply to him.
<b>Any one of the rescuers could have tried, throw a rope, talk him back in to the shore, anything...........I would have atleast tried toalking to him and get him to see that there are people that care about his problems and want to help, maybe that is why he kept looking back, hoping someone would try and talk him out of it.
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How do you know this wasn't done? The article bears no mention of it, the video clip states the guy was 100 yards from shore.....300ft.....don't know about you, but that is beyond the distance for an adequate rope throw and beyond the reach of a ladder. The fire boat was on the ground and there is no rescue swimmers or water rescue program, so in the end there really isn't much more that can be done. Besides 300 ft is a good distance to hinder effective communications, sure a amplifier etc could work, but people on shore can't hear the responses.
Since the clip does state 100 yards, this goes back to my reply to the OP especially with the "policy be damned" approach, 300ft is a significant distance to be risking personnel on a person intent on taking their own life. As I mentioned before hindsight is 20/20 here and we were not in the same predicament to be making such statements like "policy be damned" or "Too many firefighters and first responders (EMS, Cops, Etc) are scared to be sue'd and are scared that their actions, although caring and heroic, will be viewed by the public as wrong and will be taken to court...DISGUSTS ME TO NO END!!!!" The clip mentions how frustated the responders were, but in the end there just isn't the needed resources to mitigate here. The big picture needs to be looked at and such replies doesn't account for that.
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