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tower912

For the record, shift starts at 0700.   From 0730-1700, we train, inspect, shovel hydrants (endlessly this month), install smoke detectors, tour buildings, do machine and station maintenance, not to mention our TPS reports  ;D, errrrr.... daily bureaucratic duties.     After 5PM, our time is essentially our own, but we cannot leave the station.   In the evenings at work, I generally work out while watching sports.    All the while, we answer alarms.   My station went out 2100 times last year.   Being the Lieutenant, I have to spend between 10 and 25 minutes writing up a report on each alarm.    There are days where nothing happens.   Those are looked on as victories, because there are far more days when we are running from alarm to alarm.    There is no rush that compares to going from a dead sleep to into a burning building in less than 5 minutes.   I'm not going to go all Keefe here, so I will stop now.  
In honor of Pope Leo XIV,
Matthew 25: 31-46

SaintPaulWarrior

Quote from: tower912 on January 29, 2014, 06:55:34 PM
For the record, shift starts at 0700.   From 0730-1700, we train, inspect, shovel hydrants (endlessly this month), install smoke detectors, tour buildings, do machine and station maintenance, not to mention our TPS reports  ;D, errrrr.... daily bureaucratic duties.     After 5PM, our time is essentially our own, but we cannot leave the station.   In the evenings at work, I generally work out while watching sports.    All the while, we answer alarms.   My station went out 2100 times last year.   Being the Lieutenant, I have to spend between 10 and 25 minutes writing up a report on each alarm.    There are days where nothing happens.   Those are looked on as victories, because there are far more days when we are running from alarm to alarm.    There is no rush that compares to going from a dead sleep to into a burning building in less than 5 minutes.   I'm not going to go all Keefe here, so I will stop now.  

I think you forgot inspection.  I may be wrong.  One of my Dad's pet peeves.

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