Posted: 06/05/2011 01:00:49 AM PDT
Alameda Police and bystanders watch the man drown.
An Alameda Fire Engine was video taped driving by the scene.
Department policy prevents firefighters from entering the water...
ALAMEDA -- Only two people went into the chilly San Francisco Bay waters on Monday to help a suicidal Raymond Zack, and neither was wearing a police or firefighter uniform. When Zack, 52, despondent and depressed, walked fully clothed into the Bay at Robert Crown Memorial State Beach to take his own life, at least 10 Alameda firefighters and police officers made the choice not to come to his aid. They stood on the beach and watched, for about an hour.
( Full Story... ©KRISTIN J. BENDER/OAKLAND TRIBUNE )
References:
http://www.thereporter.com/news/ci_18210604
http://www.washingtonpoliticsnews.com/?p=2002
http://www.whatthefolly.com/2011/06/03/us-news-alameda-ca-drowning-...
Tags:
Report from this incident:
http://www.docstoc.com/docs/document-preview.aspx?doc_id=97250614
Some excerpts from the article on FH:
An independent review of the Memorial Day death of an apparently suicidal man at Alameda's Crown Beach rebukes the city for not having a water rescue crew at the time, and urges better coordination between the island city's police and fire agencies when handling offshore emergencies...................
Alameda's emergency responders couldn't go into the water, officials later said, because they weren't trained in water rescue and they believed Zack might become violent.
One must remember that hands were tied by policy and that breaking said policy can be construed as freelancing. The report isn't "blaming" the response, or lack there of, of responders here, but instead looking at the city policy which created the response issue.
The Fire Department's water rescue unit, which had been eliminated amid budgetary cutbacks, has been restarted - addressing one of the main recommendations of Grijalva's report. On Aug. 8 two firefighter swimmers using their boat rescued a kite surfer in the waters off Shoreline Drive............................
This does go to show how budget cuts CAN and DO have an impact when it comes to public safety, despite countless politicians saying otherwise when cuts are made. This report further goes to examplify that.
Zack suffered from depression, and his family said they were not sure he really wanted to kill himself. He waded about 150 yards from shore on Memorial Day and told one witness he wanted to stay out there to pray.
150 yards, translates to 450 feet, which is quite a distance for a shore based rescue, is a significant difference to have effective communications and a significant distance where there is potential for violence, despite what family of bystanders say about a person. Just thought I would mention that distance aspect since there have ben some commentsnot factoring the issue.
"No matter what they say, it comes down to this: There were a lot of public safety officers who stood on the beach and did nothing," said one of the more vocal critics, Alameda resident David Howard. "That must never happen again."
While critics are correct in this not happening again, it still is easy to have 20/20 hindsight and make critiques and comments about "doing nothing".
Link to article:
http://www.firehouse.com/news/top-headlines/report-faults-californi...
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