So Teddy Boy a.k.a. Mensa boy is still propogating the myth that everyone is wrong, excepting HIMSELF of course!-![]()
Why do you suppose most of us read your rants?
So, you're just howling at the moon?- JLM ... No, M,M&M, I`m advancing the argument that the Toronto Fire Chief, mayor, budget director and the legions of other folks who can read and research and reason for themselves are right about this specific issue perhaps because, unlike you for example, they have no vested interest in big government and public sector privelege at the hands of the wretches who toil in the privagte sector and make up 80% of the population and instead focus on value for the taxpayers.
- LW ... Actually, most of you lack the intelligence and experience and attention span to read my so called rants or so the quality of the responses leads me to conclude.
TeddyBallgame;1701085 - LW ... Actually said:Typical arrogant response and we are all saturated with your "wisdom" about the lunatic left, now maybe you can expound on the arrogant right.
So, you're just howling at the moon?
Typical arrogant response and we are all saturated with your "wisdom" about the lunatic left, now maybe you can expound on the arrogant right.
- LW ... I should think that only lone wolves howl at the moon. I post here a bit because sometimes I hope (albeit I am often disappointed) to generate discussion at least among the handful of informed conservative and moderate posters who still come here occasionally and sometimes I just want to tweak the smug, self satisifed and hopelessly out of touch noses of the loony left who dominate the place.
TeddyBallgame;1701085 - LW ... Actually said:Typical arrogant response and we are all saturated with your "wisdom" about the lunatic left, now maybe you can expound on the arrogant right.
TeddyBallgame;1701095 - JLM ... Seeing as how you have posted 58 posts here to every one of mine said:"59,000 posts"? -Teddy boy- you can't even get easily verifiable facts correct, SO WTF would anyone pay any attention to anything you have to say, given your simpliest offerings are blatant bullsh*t?
I don't know the source of the statistics you quote but I retired from the second larget fire agency in the US. We operated 168 fire stations an eleven Life Guard Beach posts. Our response levels continued to rise from 1990 until 2000 and while the majority (72%) were Medical in nature the fire numbers steadily rose also. When I was still assigend to a station (7, West Hollywood) we rarely (if ever) went to bed during our 24 hour duty shift. True, fire numbers are decreasing in the areas which had no effective fire regulations at one time but now have implemented and enforce some now. But in a nationally sense I doubt the accuracy of your information. The numbers of wild fires in the western states has doubled in the past five years.
Typical arrogant response and we are all saturated with your "wisdom" about the lunatic left, now maybe you can expound on the arrogant right.
"59,000 posts"? -Teddy boy- you can't even get easily verifiable facts correct, SO WTF would anyone pay any attention to anything you have to say, given your simpliest offerings are blatant bullsh*t?
TeddyBallgame;1701114 - JLM aka Just a Loony Moron ... OK said:Now piss off for awhile, you obsessed A-Hole, I`m done with you today[/B].
Interesting. Considering that I didn't spend every hour of every day on-shift fighting fire, I managed to stay busy anyway. As you say, there are a lot of duties firefighters perform besides just fighting fires, from educating the public about many aspects concerning safety to attending vehicle crashes and emergency medical responses. There's also constant training on new and better equipment and procedures as well as the constant maintenance of equipment.- Did any of you know that in the past forty years the number of fires in the US has fallen by over 40% while the number of firefighters has risen by 40%?
- And did you know that only 2-5% of the public's calls to fire departments for assistance are actually fire emergencies?
- Or that rapidly increasing numbers of our firefighters now pull down six figure salaries for working their 6 shifts a month which gives them plenty of time to moonlight at other jobs while they prepare to take their early retirements in their early 50s on their lavishly subsidized, guaranteed, defined benefits, fully indexed pensions not available to those who are not in the new priveleged class of monopoly public sector union members.
- If you didn`t know these things and if you were naive enough to think that I was being a bit harsh on L. Gilbert recently in my thread about not contributing to the Coles bookstore book drive for schools when he commented about having nothing but respect for the firefighters`union that scored him his cushy gig and early retirement, perhaps you should enlighten yourself by reading award winning Globe and Mail columnist Margaret Wente`s column of today concerning the extraordinarily brazen and extravagant (even by public sector standards) rip offs of the beleagured taxpayers by the fire fighters unions.
MARGARET WENTE
How firefighters fan the flames of fear
The Globe and Mail
Published Thursday, Jan. 17 2013, 6:00 AM EST
Last updated Thursday, Jan. 17 2013, 6:08 AM EST
What happens if your city dares to cut the fire department budget?
Easy: Children will die. Maybe even yours.
That is the message of Toronto’s firefighters, who have been waging a shameless fear campaign against the poor wretches who are trying to rein in costs at City Hall.
Those wretches are no match for Ed Kennedy, the president of the firefighters’ association, who has been posing in front of burned-out houses to make his point that people probably died because of the firefighting jobs that went unfilled last year. More cutbacks would “definitely impact the response times,” he warned. Firefighters have been showing up at City Hall in T-shirts with the slogan “Seconds Count.” They’ve also been busy polishing their halos. They recently made heartwarming news when they donated children’s toys to a family whose house (and Christmas presents) had caught fire on Christmas Day. The sobbing family thanked them on the air.
A powerful combination of fear-mongering and hero worship has made Canada’s fire departments largely immune to budget cuts. As a consequence, the citizens are getting hosed.
Thanks to better building materials and awareness, the number of fires in the United States, for example, has plunged in recent years – more than 40 per cent since the 1970s, according to the U.S. Fire Prevention Association. But the number of professional firefighters has increased 40 per cent.
We like to think of firefighters as brave men who rush into burning buildings and risk their lives to save others. And so they do – once in a while. These days, the overwhelming majority of their work is responding to medical emergencies – many of them non-life-threatening, such as picking up elderly people who have fallen down. Of course we have EMS for that. But firefighters have to justify their existence. So they race to the scene because they can often get there a few minutes faster than the paramedics can. The evidence that this faster response saves lives is scant to non-existent.
And when paramedics show up two minutes later, then what? Well, the firefighters can always direct traffic.
In most jurisdictions in North America, only 2 to 5 per cent of calls to fire departments are actual fire emergencies. The rest are medical emergencies, false alarms, vehicle accidents and other miscellaneous events. Last year, Toronto’s fire department logged 145,335 incidents, around 7 per cent of which were “reported” fires. The number of actual fires was considerably smaller. Despite those dangerously unfilled firefighting jobs, fire fatalities in Toronto have dropped from 19 in 2001 to only nine last year.
If the nature of emergencies has changed profoundly, why hasn’t our model for responding to them changed at all? The answer: union clout and spineless politicians (who often enjoy the benefit of union clout at election time). That is why we have become all too accustomed to the sight of million-dollar hook-and-ladders screaming down the block whenever a little old lady has a fainting spell.
Toronto’s firefighters are near the top of the heap. They enjoy some of the best pay, pensions, perks and work conditions in North America. Toronto’s per-capita firefighting tab is 30 per cent higher than in neighbouring Mississauga. Many firefighters pull down in excess of six figures. They get regular “recognition bonuses” so they won’t leave, despite the fact that retention is not a problem. They can retire in their early 50s on full pensions. Best of all, they are required to work just six 24-hour shifts a month, which leaves lots of time for driving limos or working construction on the side. As for the crucial issue of response time, a 2010 study of 14 fire departments clocked how long it took firemen to get dressed and get on their trucks. Toronto placed last.
Across the U.S., the firefighters’ gravy train is crashing to a halt as municipalities run out of money. Some smaller cities are amalgamating services, and some are contracting out. At least one is planning to replace a few of its fire trucks with a paramedic in an SUV.
But not in Toronto, where smoke, mirrors and fear-mongering have triumphed once again. Yesterday the firefighters’ union won their budget fight. And citizens will pay and pay and pay.
Interesting. Considering that I didn't spend every hour of every day on-shift fighting fire, I managed to stay busy anyway. As you say, there are a lot of duties firefighters perform besides just fighting fires, from educating the public about many aspects concerning safety to attending vehicle crashes and emergency medical responses. There's also constant training on new and better equipment and procedures as well as the constant maintenance of equipment.
That's not to mention that during our relatively few times at actual fighting fires, we are subjected to a variety of dangers from injury as well as a much higher rate of lung diseases, cancer, etc.
The vast majority of firefighters are not receiving 6 figure salaries either.
Perhaps you have a sharp stick up your a$$ about firefighters and their unions, but the least you could do is include ALL the aspects and quit f'n exaggerating things you think supports your opinion.
- Torrington (sic) incorrectly noted that fire fighters are being asked to do more than ever
-
- JLM aka Just a Loony Moron ... OK, idiot boy, my eyesight is failing and I misread your little post thing as 59,000 and change rather than 29,000 and change. Nonethless, you still have outposted me by the 58-1 that I indicated and I still doubt that anyone can remember a single one of your nearly 30,000 puerile posts. Now piss off for awhile, you obsessed A-Hole, I`m done with you today.
Did you know firefighters have a lower than average life expectancy?- Did any of you know that in the past forty years the number of fires in the US has fallen by over 40% while the number of firefighters has risen by 40%?
- And did you know that only 2-5% of the public's calls to fire departments for assistance are actually fire emergencies?
- Or that rapidly increasing numbers of our firefighters now pull down six figure salaries for working their 6 shifts a month which gives them plenty of time to moonlight at other jobs while they prepare to take their early retirements in their early 50s on their lavishly subsidized, guaranteed, defined benefits, fully indexed pensions not available to those who are not in the new priveleged class of monopoly public sector union members.
- If you didn`t know these things and if you were naive enough to think that I was being a bit harsh on L. Gilbert recently in my thread about not contributing to the Coles bookstore book drive for schools when he commented about having nothing but respect for the firefighters`union that scored him his cushy gig and early retirement, perhaps you should enlighten yourself by reading award winning Globe and Mail columnist Margaret Wente`s column of today concerning the extraordinarily brazen and extravagant (even by public sector standards) rip offs of the beleagured taxpayers by the fire fighters unions.
MARGARET WENTE
How firefighters fan the flames of fear
The Globe and Mail
Published Thursday, Jan. 17 2013, 6:00 AM EST
Last updated Thursday, Jan. 17 2013, 6:08 AM EST
What happens if your city dares to cut the fire department budget?
Easy: Children will die. Maybe even yours.
That is the message of Toronto’s firefighters, who have been waging a shameless fear campaign against the poor wretches who are trying to rein in costs at City Hall.
Those wretches are no match for Ed Kennedy, the president of the firefighters’ association, who has been posing in front of burned-out houses to make his point that people probably died because of the firefighting jobs that went unfilled last year. More cutbacks would “definitely impact the response times,” he warned. Firefighters have been showing up at City Hall in T-shirts with the slogan “Seconds Count.” They’ve also been busy polishing their halos. They recently made heartwarming news when they donated children’s toys to a family whose house (and Christmas presents) had caught fire on Christmas Day. The sobbing family thanked them on the air.
A powerful combination of fear-mongering and hero worship has made Canada’s fire departments largely immune to budget cuts. As a consequence, the citizens are getting hosed.
Thanks to better building materials and awareness, the number of fires in the United States, for example, has plunged in recent years – more than 40 per cent since the 1970s, according to the U.S. Fire Prevention Association. But the number of professional firefighters has increased 40 per cent.
We like to think of firefighters as brave men who rush into burning buildings and risk their lives to save others. And so they do – once in a while. These days, the overwhelming majority of their work is responding to medical emergencies – many of them non-life-threatening, such as picking up elderly people who have fallen down. Of course we have EMS for that. But firefighters have to justify their existence. So they race to the scene because they can often get there a few minutes faster than the paramedics can. The evidence that this faster response saves lives is scant to non-existent.
And when paramedics show up two minutes later, then what? Well, the firefighters can always direct traffic.
In most jurisdictions in North America, only 2 to 5 per cent of calls to fire departments are actual fire emergencies. The rest are medical emergencies, false alarms, vehicle accidents and other miscellaneous events. Last year, Toronto’s fire department logged 145,335 incidents, around 7 per cent of which were “reported” fires. The number of actual fires was considerably smaller. Despite those dangerously unfilled firefighting jobs, fire fatalities in Toronto have dropped from 19 in 2001 to only nine last year.
If the nature of emergencies has changed profoundly, why hasn’t our model for responding to them changed at all? The answer: union clout and spineless politicians (who often enjoy the benefit of union clout at election time). That is why we have become all too accustomed to the sight of million-dollar hook-and-ladders screaming down the block whenever a little old lady has a fainting spell.
Toronto’s firefighters are near the top of the heap. They enjoy some of the best pay, pensions, perks and work conditions in North America. Toronto’s per-capita firefighting tab is 30 per cent higher than in neighbouring Mississauga. Many firefighters pull down in excess of six figures. They get regular “recognition bonuses” so they won’t leave, despite the fact that retention is not a problem. They can retire in their early 50s on full pensions. Best of all, they are required to work just six 24-hour shifts a month, which leaves lots of time for driving limos or working construction on the side. As for the crucial issue of response time, a 2010 study of 14 fire departments clocked how long it took firemen to get dressed and get on their trucks. Toronto placed last.
Across the U.S., the firefighters’ gravy train is crashing to a halt as municipalities run out of money. Some smaller cities are amalgamating services, and some are contracting out. At least one is planning to replace a few of its fire trucks with a paramedic in an SUV.
But not in Toronto, where smoke, mirrors and fear-mongering have triumphed once again. Yesterday the firefighters’ union won their budget fight. And citizens will pay and pay and pay.