march call volume - utah · 13 station 124, east riverton 12662 s. 1300 w. 5 13 56 69 14 station...
TRANSCRIPT
March Call Volume
1 Station 101, West Millcreek 790 East 3900 South 5 1 FT 1 PT 43 201 2442 Station 109, Kearns 4444 West 5400 South 4 2 FT 31 178 2093 Station 117, Taylorsville 4545 South Redwood Road 8 2 PT 33 165 1984 Station 125, Midvale 7683 South Holden St. 4 23 127 1505 Station 118, Taylorsville 5317 South 2700 West 5 1 FT 1 PT 18 130 1486 Station 104, Holladay 4626 South Holladay Blvd. 4 2 PT 24 117 1417 Station 110, Cottonwood Heights 1790 South Ft. Union Blvd. 4 1 FT 1 PT 33 87 1208 Station 126, Midvale 607 East 7200 South 5 1 FT 1 PT 2 PT 18 88 1069 Station 112, Olympus 3612 East Jupiter Drive 4 24 70 9410 Station 106, East Millcreek 1911 East 3300 South 4 1 FT 1 PT 17 74 9111 Station 102, Magna 8609 West 2700 South 4 19 67 8612 Station 111, Magna 8215 West 3500 South 4 1 FT 1 PT 11 59 7013 Station 124, East Riverton 12662 S. 1300 W. 5 13 56 6914 Station 116, Cottonwood Heights 8303 South Wasatch Blvd. 3 SEASONAL 18 50 6815 Station 121, Riverton 4146 West 12600 South 4 2 FT 2 PT 7 60 6716 Station 103, Herriman 5916 West 13100 South 4 19 46 6517 Station 113, Little Cottonwood 9523 East Bypass Road 3 9 53 6218 Station 123, Herriman 4850 West Mt. Ogden Peak Dr. 4 16 33 4919 Station 108, Big Cottonwood 7688 South State Road 190 3 2 38 4020 Station 251/252 Eagle Mountain/1680 E Heritage Drive 6 0 29 2921 Station 119, Emigration 5025 East State Road 65 3 3 5 822 Station 115, Copperton 8495 West State Road 48 3 1 5 6
Grand Total 93 10 8 6 382 1,738 2,120
Medical Total Station FT Heavy Apparatus
24-Hour Ambulance
Peak Load Ambulance
Fire
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
55
4047
34
51
Mar-15 Mar-16 Mar-17 Mar-18 Mar-19
Average: 45.4
507090
110130150170190210230250
242
152
131 131 137
Mar-15 Mar-16 Mar-17 Mar-18 Mar-19
Average: 158.6
107115 117 118
105118 123 128
155
124110
120
86 92 9586 83
95 94 97
124
9483 87
21 23 2232
22 23 29 31 31 30 2733
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
160
180
Total
Medicals
Fires
Linear (Total)
Linear (Medicals)
Linear (Fires)
12 Month AverageTotal Calls: 120.0Med Calls: 93.0Fire Calls: 27.0
72 68 70
89
7265
59
7365
5865 68
55 54 54
66
4841 44
54 52
4150 50
17 14 1623 24 24
15 1913 17 15 18
0102030405060708090
100
TotalMedicalsFiresLinear (Total)Linear (Medicals)Linear (Fires)
12 Month AverageTotal Calls: 68.7Med Calls: 50.8Fire Calls: 17.9
21
25
13
26
310
201
37
112
141
425
311
0 5 10 15 20 25 30
Abdominal PainAllergies/Hives/Stings/Med Reaction
Back PainBreathing Problems
BurnsCardiac/Respiratory Arrest
Chest PainConvulsions/Seizure
DiabeticFainting Episode/Syncope
FallHeadache
HemorrhageOverdose/Poisoning/Ingestion
Pregnancy/Birth/MiscarriagePsychiatric/Behavioral
Sick PersonStabbing/Gunshot Wound
Stroke/CVATraffic Accident
Traumatic InjuryUnknown Problem (Man Down)
22
17
13
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
March 2018
Fall
TrafficAccident
Fainting-Psychiatric/Behavioral-Sick Person
25
20
14
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
March 2019
Traffic Accident
Fall
Sick Person
2
28
2
10
3
4
2
0 10 20 30
Agric/BBQ/Outside/Trash/Tree/Misc
Alarms
Biohazard/Hazmat
Flooding/Hydrant Problem/PublicAssist/Telephonic
House/High-Rise/Shed Fire
Natural Gas Leak
Person Locked Out/In
14
4
2
0
5
10
15
20
25
March 2018
Alarm
Agric/BBQ/Outside-SmokeInvestigation
ArcingLine/LineDown-House/HighRise-PersonLock Out
10
4
0
5
10
15
20
25
March 2019
Alarms
Flooding/HydrantProblem/PublicAssist/Telephonic
Flooding/HydrantProblem/PublicAssist/Telephonic2
ALSCalls ALS Tx BLS
Calls BLS TxTotal
MedicalCalls
Total Tx
Station 110 36 31 51 4 87 35
0102030405060708090
100110120
Station 110
TX 40.2 %
43 4437
45 44 43 4639
71
53
3935
19
24 27 30
2321
1417
31 3937
312420
1015
21 22
32
22
40
14
24
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
Total TxALS TxBLS TxLinear (Total Tx)Linear (ALS Tx)Linear (BLS Tx)
12 Month Average
Total Tx: 44.9ALS Tx: 17.2BLS Tx: 17.2
50 47.838.9
52.3 5345.3 48.9
40.2
57.3 56.447 48.7
0102030405060708090
100
110
Linear (110)
12 Month Transport Percentage
48.8 %
2426
29 30 30
23
17
23
2927 26
28
1614
12
2016
14
10
11
2125 24
24
812
17
1014
97
128
22
4
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
45
Total TxALS TxBLS TxLinear (Total Tx)Linear (ALS Tx)Linear (BLS Tx)
12 Month Average
Total Tx: 26.0ALS Tx: 11.2BLS Tx: 8.1
43.6 48.153.7
45.5
62.556.1
38.6 42.6
55.865.9
52 51.2
0
20
40
60
80
100
Zone 116Linear (Zone 116)
12 Month Transport Percentage
51.3 %
Total Occupancy Inspections: 107Assembly Occupancies Inspected: 4Business Occupancies Inspected: 61Hazardous Occupancies Inspected: 21Mercantile Occupancies Inspected: 11Residential Occupancies Inspected: 7Daycare/Preschool Inspections: 1Pre-Construction/Site Inspections: 2
Total Inspector Plan Reviews: 59Commercial Building: 1Commercial Site Plan: 2Residential Building: 30Residential Site Plan: 7Fire Sprinkler Plan: 13Other/Miscellaneous: 2
Total Protection System Reviews: 7Commercial Fire Sprinkler System Permit: 3Commercial Fire Alarm System Permit: 2Residential Fire Sprinkler System Permit: 1Other/Miscellaneous: 1
Total Fire Protection System Inspections: 14Fire Alarm Systems: 2Fire Sprinkler Systems: 12
Total Administrative: 268Code Consultation: 79Complaints Checked: 159Meetings Attended: 13Haz-Mat Permits Issued: 17
Swift Water Dangers Safety MessageBy UFA PIO Ryan Love
UFA would like to remind residents of swift water dangers as the snow melts.
Several late storms have brought much precipitation to the Wasatch Front following a decade of less than impressive snowfall. Warm temperatures have begun to melt the mountain snow that will flow down the valley through a network of rivers. The recreation opportunities seem endless. Though the rivers may be tempting this summer, the high flows and cold temperatures make rivers deceptively dangerous. Big and Little Cottonwood Creeks have not had flows as high as currently forecasted since 2011.
Rivers with high flows and cold temperatures can claim the lives of even the most experienced and skilled swimmers. With the large snowpack, these fast-flowing, cold conditions are likely to continue long into the summer season. Hypothermia can occur quickly and severely incapacitate even the strongest swimmers. As the weather warms up and residents begin to flock to the water, Unified Fire Authority wants to remind Utahans’ to take the right precautions before entering the water.
In Northern Utah, drowning deaths most often occur in warm months. What makes Utah unique is the frequency of drowning deaths in water bodies fed by snow melt, which includes most cold-running rivers found in the state. In May 2017, a mother and a Good Samaritan drowned while trying to rescue a 4-year-old girl in the Provo River.
Continued on next page …
All too often, we see would-be rescuers tragically become victims as well. If you witness someone being swept away by the current, do NOT jump into the water to try to save them. Look for something you can use to reach out to the victim and call 911 immediately.
When someone is swept away, it is instantly a critical situation. The water is often just a few degrees above freezing temperatures. Once you are in it, your body can shut down very quickly and your ability to use your motor functions is going to be limited. If you are swept away by swift water, try to focus on keeping your head above the water and your feet downstream facing the direction you are going. This will eliminate the chances of crashing into boulders and getting caught up in underwater hazards or strainers.
Our local rivers may have currents that are deceptively strong and just a foot or two deep could have an aggressive and powerful current that goes with it. Anytime you, your children, or your pets are recreating near a body of water, make sure you have a personal flotation device. If you are anywhere near moving water, expect the unexpected. Expect that it is going to be stronger than you think it is and that it may very well sweep you away and please take necessary precautions to keep your family safe.
Unified Fire Authority3380 South 900 West
Salt Lake City, UT 84119801-743-7200
www.unifiedfire.org
Cottonwood Heights Liaison: Assistant Chief Mike Watson [email protected]
Fire Prevention: Christen Yee 801-743-7228Public Relations: Ryan Love 916-667-2464
Event/Support Scheduling 385-743-1746 [email protected] Tour/Visit Scheduling 801-562-9129 [email protected]
Emergency Manager Chet Ellis [email protected]