Emergency Fire Response happened in 2003.
Emergency Fire Response was created on 2003-07-30.
Five situations that will need an emergency response are crime, fire, drowning, car accident, and dog bite. There are plenty of other things that would need an emergency response, when in doubt ask for help.
If you can expect a quick response from the EMT, fire, or police, then you have an emergency. If you cannot expect a quick response, you have a disaster. For example: if the fire department comes quickly to put out your house fire, you have an emergency. But if the fire department doesn't come to put out your house fire because the whole city is in flames from an earthquake, war, alien invasion, or a rampaging Godzilla, you have a disaster.
What is the response time to a fire alarm system under the nfpa code book or life safety 101 code book.
True.
a hazardous material is exposed to fire
True.
True
True
The protocol for responding to a fire emergency typically involves several key steps: activating the fire alarm system, notifying emergency services, ensuring evacuation procedures are followed, and using fire extinguishers if safe to do so. Personnel should follow established emergency response plans, which may include designated escape routes and assembly points. After the incident, a review of the response will usually take place to assess effectiveness and improve future protocols.
Parking in a fire lane and obstructing emergency vehicles can result in fines, towing of the vehicle, and potentially endangering lives by delaying emergency response times. It is illegal and unsafe to block access for emergency vehicles.
just call 767..you'd get the response fast fast