Having worked in 9-1-1 comm center, it can totally happen! All it takes is accidentally touching the wrong button and it is TOO late.. Fire dispatch takes priority over fixing an oops, so gotta say, enjoy the rush and get the next one.
Same here...woke up two stations in the middle of the night, only one was on the call. Canceled the incorrect dispatch and waited for the phone to ring...but it didn't. I hope they got back to sleep.
@@chandlerwood3833 Well good, the lost of life and property is never really a good thing to get excited about. I was bored in the comm center I worked in, wished to have anything happen, even just my phone to ring... next call was a house fire where a child was killed.
@@Duster911 I hate to see people's stuff burn up yet at the same time I'm out of practice at a core part of the job. You best belive my volunteer department has caught fires left and right. Only when I'm at work tho
It's very confusing when the same outdoor siren is used for fire call-out, tornado's, air-raids, and civil defense. It's hard to know if one should hide, run, jump, dive, or kiss their butt goodbye.
I worked at a historic tour railway and the firehouse was right next to us. They would sound off the outdoor siren to call the local firefighters to the house. The town that I was in was very small and the town was surrounded by large acres of farms and farm land. It did scare me a few times when it happened. Thinking the same way. Should I duck for cover or something?
A steady tone generally is what's used in peacetime situations iirc, and has historically carried the meaning of "check your local news source". An attack warning is the only one allowed to wail the siren up and down and up again.
I honestly don’t see why people get so shy like we wanna stare at their shit lol like it’s more noticeable for me cause I gotta big ass bludge and i just change like a normal person while others are going into stalls and shit lol
Once, our tones went out about 20 times in a row with no voice notification. I never found out what happened, but it sounded like someone was banging the dispatcher on the panel!
Town I grew up in had two timers for the siren, one would suspend the automatic mechanical phone and the other would howl for noontime. The suspend timer broke one day and screwed up 12 lunches.
No the worst is when you get called for a dwelling fire at 2am and it turns out that someone decided to make popcorn and burn some, this setting off their fire alarm.
@@Firefuzz11 lol..right. A few winters ago we were dispatched, in the middle of the night of course, for the pool house on fire at one of our local city parks. It was one of those bitter cold nights where the snow was a fine powder. Turns out that what the caller thought were flames and smoke was just the wind blowing the "powder" like snow around in the orange glow of the street light
Just false alarms at 2 am in general 😂 not as bad as a volley because we get a little more time to have the adrenaline wear off but still a bitch to go back to sleep. Can't imagine how much of a pain it must be for the career folk.
@@Firefuzz11 Nope, one better… You’re dispatched to 123 Main St for the structure fire and as you’re rolling up, dispatch tells you that it’s 123 Main St in a totally different jurisdiction on the other side of the County and nowhere NEAR your area. THOSE suck more than anything!!! Makes ya wonder what questions are being asked sometimes when people call 911!…
The closest association I have to this was getting a Cease Fire called while working as a RSO (for those not in the firearms sphere this is NEVER a good thing) only to rush down to where it was started to find out a young kid had seen a deer passing along the brush line and was afraid it might run across and get shot.
@@MrKachannie If you've ever lived through say a Tornado warning for the area you live (like it should hit YOUR town not somewhere near) or any other natural disaster it's a pretty similar adrenaline response. To be clear a Cease Fire on a gun range generally means One of Three things has occurred: 1. There is an object down range of the Firing Line (a physical line/barrier where shooters MUST step up to in order to fire their guns) that should not be, IE. people, animals, vehicles, etc. 2. A person has been Injured while shooting, this is an emergency situation and as such ALL shooting should Cease to avoid splitting the RSO's attention between helping the wounded and also managing the range. 3. Some form of Emergency has occurred that has made the range unsafe, IE. Weather, the actions of a shooter on the range, the two above mentioned reasons, and many many more that aren't worth listing. All three of these main reasons are VERY dangerous on a range where you have live ammunition in real firearms in the hands of people, this is why a Cease Fire rule exists, NRA regulations state a Cease Fire MUST involve the unloading of every firearm and tabling of every firearm IMMEADIATELY, there are NO exceptions to this rule and people found to be breaking it can (depending on range rules and location) actually be charged with a Felony if they aren't careful. It's a very nervewracking situation no matter how well trained you are or how long you've been doing the job and so while the kid DID make the right call obviously it had me more than a bit on edge the rest of the day.
When they announce the units that were assigned to the car, their unit, engine 23, was not listed over the radio. So they weren’t actually assigned to the call that was being made
@@kuiper921 as far as dispatch end, most areas now have buttons to click to "tone" each department. These guys would have got the original message, "fire" "Medical" but their specific audio tone went off. While clustering for a rig, dispatch confirmed who was needed at that time. It was not them
Had one happen in Shreveport La years ago a friend of mine was working B shift and they called for a house a fire well the issue was there station was 30 minutes form where the fire was at they called them over the pavers they left the station when they arrived and said engine 2 is on scene the Chief came and said what are y’all doing here we didn’t respond y’all.
Most 911 dispatch centers have a list of stations that automatically appear on the computer screen when they receive a dispatch and all they have to do is click one thing and it sends out the tones for a specific type of call.
They did that a few days ago here in Berks County PA. Strausstown and Shartlesville got called out because the dispatcher got the township instead of the town. The call was in Hamburg Borough, and so Hamburg and Shoemakersville got called immediately after and Strauss and Shartle was recalled just after the dispatcher corrected with calling out the right companies.
@@TxEMTEthan well it really depends. Ive seen some that have racks with all their names on them with they equipment. I guess it really just is a person thing.
@@fmartinjr most modern CAD systems can create ad hoc pager lists based off the units being dispatched to a call, and push the list to the encoder. In the center I worked in in the early 2000s, the only time we "pushed the buttons" on the paging encoder was if the CAD system was partially or fully down.
The loud air raid siren you hear in the background is the fire department's Station Siren , it's job is to alert volunteer firefighters to get to the station to run a call.
sooo, im somewhat confused. is this like a half staff half volly department, or was there inclement weather, because ive never heard of a fire sire for a paid department
@@turtles02 yeah, I know that, that’s why I’m asking. There were men there before the tone, suggesting a paid department, or at least staffed, yet the siren going off after the tones suggest a volly department. There are some departments though that are half staffed with paid AND volly, didn’t know if this was one of those
@@Thatweirduncle A lot of the Stations where we are have alarms that sound outside after the tones especially in busy areas. They along with flashing lights warn traffic and pedestrians that emergency equipment is about to deploy from the station and to keep clear. Quieter than the ones used to summon Vollies, they can still be heard a good 100m away
@@k1mat I’ve seen warning lights and speakers for the tones to go off outside, but never of sirens, though that’s a good idea, makes sense to let people know, and a siren like that is definitely an effective way to do so
Nah, it will cancel/reset everything that has been activated. So , just ride it out and listen to that House sireen. It doesn't happen too often. What they should have done was,announced on the dispatch channel for this company and it's responders to disregard the fire alerts.
@@fmartinjr I couldn't understand it partly the acoustics, the quality of the video sound or maybe troubles with my hearing. It sounded like the verbal alarm was repeated rather than canceling the call. The bottom line here is that from a layperson in firefighting, it's easy to misunderstand what was being said. I wondered why everyone was just standing there and not getting ready to move on the call. LOL
Happened just this morning at 6am "Oh...no problem....I pissed the bed when the tones went off....so I had to get up anyway" I think dispatch figures if they're awake on a Sunday morning....we should be too
Who's the clown that would ask a question like that? Maybe he's the engineer. Maybe he's the IC. All these clueless non-firefighting know-it-alls making comments.
@@ffemtx4 LOL!! That’s a good one. Yep. I’m a non fire anything. Only been been “fighting what you fear” long before you were even thought of. Long before your favorite place to fight a fire is from “ hitting it hard from the yard”. geesh, ketchup d**ks glad we got jolly vollies so the career guys can have a good laugh from time to time.
@@dannermanner5506 "...long before you were even thought of." You must be a gem to be on the job with. With all your assumptive, negativity. BTW...Been eating smoke since 1989. L.U. #2. I'm going to sound like you for a moment and guess YOU weren't even "thought of" at that time.
@@ffemtx4 how bout since ‘79. And I’m betting you’re the guy who runs to HR cause you got you’re feeling hurt. The reason that pranks are no long tolerable in your department. You’re the type that don’t belong in the service. So, go on and complain. See how well you be accepted at the table of hard knocks.
seriously how slow can they go..... like dude stop texting on you phone. what a joke..... No wonder they realized it wasn't legit before they mounted up. All milling about disheveled looking clueless
@@ffemtx4 all I’m wondering is what made the dude filming decide he wanted to film. Seemed like he was just filming everyone for fun then it turned into a fake call lmao…
Or most likely what really happened was they heard their tones and siren but not their station or unit numbers on the dispatch, the dude texting was looking on the fire dispatch app to see if he could find the call on his phone to see what it was. I used to do this when I was an officer to get the address and whatever details about said call.
Yeah sucks when your getting paid to sleep . And the call to go to work turns out to be a false alarm. And you get to go back to sleep. Waaa.... Waaa...Waaa....
Nah Joe,this is a mixed crew house. Full time, part time, Volunteers coming from home, active Volunteers that live in quarters. The jawn that was closest to me is Volunteering at this house.
@@darrylking2500 so put the helmet on first then pull the hood over it? Spoken like a true vollie! Sorry it took me so long to respond but I was working my day shift
Having worked in 9-1-1 comm center, it can totally happen! All it takes is accidentally touching the wrong button and it is TOO late.. Fire dispatch takes priority over fixing an oops, so gotta say, enjoy the rush and get the next one.
Same here...woke up two stations in the middle of the night, only one was on the call. Canceled the incorrect dispatch and waited for the phone to ring...but it didn't. I hope they got back to sleep.
We know you do it on purpose to savor the sweet tears of disappointment 😉
"Enjoy the rush and get the next one." Bro. The last one was almost 3 months ago there ain't no next one tf
@@chandlerwood3833 Well good, the lost of life and property is never really a good thing to get excited about. I was bored in the comm center I worked in, wished to have anything happen, even just my phone to ring... next call was a house fire where a child was killed.
@@Duster911 I hate to see people's stuff burn up yet at the same time I'm out of practice at a core part of the job. You best belive my volunteer department has caught fires left and right. Only when I'm at work tho
Bless you all thank you for your hard work and protecting the community
It's very confusing when the same outdoor siren is used for fire call-out, tornado's, air-raids, and civil defense. It's hard to know if one should hide, run, jump, dive, or kiss their butt goodbye.
I worked at a historic tour railway and the firehouse was right next to us. They would sound off the outdoor siren to call the local firefighters to the house. The town that I was in was very small and the town was surrounded by large acres of farms and farm land. It did scare me a few times when it happened. Thinking the same way. Should I duck for cover or something?
@@paulabunyan8734 actually it's easy to tell you have to listen and pay attention
A steady tone generally is what's used in peacetime situations iirc, and has historically carried the meaning of "check your local news source". An attack warning is the only one allowed to wail the siren up and down and up again.
Nice to see that I’m not the only person who will drop my long pants and roll out in my underwear 🩲
I honestly don’t see why people get so shy like we wanna stare at their shit lol like it’s more noticeable for me cause I gotta big ass bludge and i just change like a normal person while others are going into stalls and shit lol
@@BlueFlame how big
@@BlueFlame tell me more, daddy..
Same here everytime!
@@BlueFlame your teasing us how big?
"They done April fooled us"😂😂😂😂
Mad respect to the guy in his undies!
Mad respect to all firefighters!
Under Armour compression shorts works really well
@MrBusterpalmer UA is highly flammable material... not a suitable base layer for interior operations
@@anthonybarnes5687 if your undies catch fire with bunker pants on you’ve got bigger problems.
@A guy from Delco no shit, but guys bail out as a room flashes and get burned... that UA is getting cut out of you. You do whatever you want
Long underwear is a really good base layer, it breathes well and it's comfy
0:23 that's the "Could be work" pose.
Once, our tones went out about 20 times in a row with no voice notification. I never found out what happened, but it sounded like someone was banging the dispatcher on the panel!
Ya know, wouldn't be surprised if that was really the case.
Town I grew up in had two timers for the siren, one would suspend the automatic mechanical phone and the other would howl for noontime. The suspend timer broke one day and screwed up 12 lunches.
...and of course this usually happens at 2am and you spend an hour and a half trying to fall back to sleep
No the worst is when you get called for a dwelling fire at 2am and it turns out that someone decided to make popcorn and burn some, this setting off their fire alarm.
@@Firefuzz11 lol..right. A few winters ago we were dispatched, in the middle of the night of course, for the pool house on fire at one of our local city parks. It was one of those bitter cold nights where the snow was a fine powder. Turns out that what the caller thought were flames and smoke was just the wind blowing the "powder" like snow around in the orange glow of the street light
Just false alarms at 2 am in general 😂 not as bad as a volley because we get a little more time to have the adrenaline wear off but still a bitch to go back to sleep. Can't imagine how much of a pain it must be for the career folk.
@@Micsmit_45 yup, especially when the calls won't stop coming
@@Firefuzz11 Nope, one better… You’re dispatched to 123 Main St for the structure fire and as you’re rolling up, dispatch tells you that it’s 123 Main St in a totally different jurisdiction on the other side of the County and nowhere NEAR your area. THOSE suck more than anything!!! Makes ya wonder what questions are being asked sometimes when people call 911!…
The closest association I have to this was getting a Cease Fire called while working as a RSO (for those not in the firearms sphere this is NEVER a good thing) only to rush down to where it was started to find out a young kid had seen a deer passing along the brush line and was afraid it might run across and get shot.
What's an RSO?
@@MrKachannie gun range safety officer, essentially you make sure no one kills anyone else, or themselves
@@biosaber585 oh wtf, that makes sense. Sounds scary
@@MrKachannie If you've ever lived through say a Tornado warning for the area you live (like it should hit YOUR town not somewhere near) or any other natural disaster it's a pretty similar adrenaline response. To be clear a Cease Fire on a gun range generally means One of Three things has occurred:
1. There is an object down range of the Firing Line (a physical line/barrier where shooters MUST step up to in order to fire their guns) that should not be, IE. people, animals, vehicles, etc.
2. A person has been Injured while shooting, this is an emergency situation and as such ALL shooting should Cease to avoid splitting the RSO's attention between helping the wounded and also managing the range.
3. Some form of Emergency has occurred that has made the range unsafe, IE. Weather, the actions of a shooter on the range, the two above mentioned reasons, and many many more that aren't worth listing.
All three of these main reasons are VERY dangerous on a range where you have live ammunition in real firearms in the hands of people, this is why a Cease Fire rule exists, NRA regulations state a Cease Fire MUST involve the unloading of every firearm and tabling of every firearm IMMEADIATELY, there are NO exceptions to this rule and people found to be breaking it can (depending on range rules and location) actually be charged with a Felony if they aren't careful.
It's a very nervewracking situation no matter how well trained you are or how long you've been doing the job and so while the kid DID make the right call obviously it had me more than a bit on edge the rest of the day.
@@biosaber585 that sounds absolutely stressful
Can someone explain what’s wrong here, like what they said in the tones that made everyone realize it wasn’t legitimate?
When they announce the units that were assigned to the car, their unit, engine 23, was not listed over the radio. So they weren’t actually assigned to the call that was being made
@@FarmerJohn1957 ohhhh i see, thanks
@@kuiper921 as far as dispatch end, most areas now have buttons to click to "tone" each department. These guys would have got the original message, "fire" "Medical" but their specific audio tone went off. While clustering for a rig, dispatch confirmed who was needed at that time. It was not them
www.minquas23.com
@@FarmerJohn1957people keep being mean to me what should I do 😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢❤❤❤😢😢😢😢😢 0:22
cool Video. funny keep posting more videos about tones going off in the station and getting calls
Miss duty night and inclement weather stand by. Miss the brotherhood. Stay safe. Stay warm.
even more fun when its 3am
And yes, those have happened a time or more
Had one happen in Shreveport La years ago a friend of mine was working B shift and they called for a house a fire well the issue was there station was 30 minutes form where the fire was at they called them over the pavers they left the station when they arrived and said engine 2 is on scene the Chief came and said what are y’all doing here we didn’t respond y’all.
Been there many times. They're slammed with calls at comm center. Eithet way they're better off toning too many unit than not enough.
Most 911 dispatch centers have a list of stations that automatically appear on the computer screen when they receive a dispatch and all they have to do is click one thing and it sends out the tones for a specific type of call.
Amanda
It happens more often than one would imagine! But it makes for good training!
They did that a few days ago here in Berks County PA. Strausstown and Shartlesville got called out because the dispatcher got the township instead of the town. The call was in Hamburg Borough, and so Hamburg and Shoemakersville got called immediately after and Strauss and Shartle was recalled just after the dispatcher corrected with calling out the right companies.
Happened to me the other night. Just getting ready for bed and tones drop. They toned the department across the lake on our channel
why dont you stage your gear by the truck you're assigned to?
Alot of departments dont
Because I'm going home and going to bed
@@fmartinjr but, from what it looked like nobody had their gear staged close to the truck
@@Code3Indiana I did not realize that. From my point of view, it sounds counter productive
@@TxEMTEthan well it really depends. Ive seen some that have racks with all their names on them with they equipment. I guess it really just is a person thing.
I’m a volunteer firefighter. It hasn’t happened to me but it has happened to other departments in my county 😂
"Baby johns" lol.
Lol baby johns
I like the tornado kid of siren in the back round
Somehow the cops were behind this.
It's 2022 and your CAD system isn't automatically pushing pager lists to your encoders?
Pager lists?
@@fmartinjr most modern CAD systems can create ad hoc pager lists based off the units being dispatched to a call, and push the list to the encoder. In the center I worked in in the early 2000s, the only time we "pushed the buttons" on the paging encoder was if the CAD system was partially or fully down.
Can't take back a siren activation lol
What station/ department is this and do they have a website or facebook or something?
Great Response video even though you didn’t go on the call
What's with the raid siren
here in the midwest when ever there is a volunteer dept they will sound the siren.
@@Anon_Ymous It's a good way to let other volunteers know "WAKE UP, SHOWTIME!"
Must be an air raid
Why is the Silent Hill alarm going off? I'd be in full gear hiding in the corner.
The loud air raid siren you hear in the background is the fire department's Station Siren , it's job is to alert volunteer firefighters to get to the station to run a call.
That has to be the slowest moving department
The hell are you talking about? There is no call for the company. Are you dense?
Have no comprehension skills?
This video has zero relevancy to me but somehow the algorithm knew I would click on it 😅
sooo, im somewhat confused. is this like a half staff half volly department, or was there inclement weather, because ive never heard of a fire sire for a paid department
Vollies ain’t paid
@@turtles02 yeah, I know that, that’s why I’m asking. There were men there before the tone, suggesting a paid department, or at least staffed, yet the siren going off after the tones suggest a volly department. There are some departments though that are half staffed with paid AND volly, didn’t know if this was one of those
@@Thatweirduncle A lot of the Stations where we are have alarms that sound outside after the tones especially in busy areas. They along with flashing lights warn traffic and pedestrians that emergency equipment is about to deploy from the station and to keep clear. Quieter than the ones used to summon Vollies, they can still be heard a good 100m away
@@k1mat I’ve seen warning lights and speakers for the tones to go off outside, but never of sirens, though that’s a good idea, makes sense to let people know, and a siren like that is definitely an effective way to do so
They hang around the station and have duty crews that sleep over to man apparatus.
why is there a air raid siren going off?
Must be an air raid
No big deal, just go back and watch Television again... 🤣🤣🤣
lmao dispatch hit THE ENTIRE COUNTY one night at 130am there wasn't even a call hahaha
🤣 we have 2 brand new dispatch people they both started at the same time, their first 2 weeks were real fun 🤣 random tones dropping
@@mattpaulson4203 oh lawd there's a farrrr
Sweet fire whistle!
Don't hit it hard from my yard.
Dispatch needs to reset
Nah, it will cancel/reset everything that has been activated. So , just ride it out and listen to that House sireen. It doesn't happen too often.
What they should have done was,announced on the dispatch channel for this company and it's responders to disregard the fire alerts.
@@fmartinjr I couldn't understand it partly the acoustics, the quality of the video sound or maybe troubles with my hearing. It sounded like the verbal alarm was repeated rather than canceling the call. The bottom line here is that from a layperson in firefighting, it's easy to misunderstand what was being said. I wondered why everyone was just standing there and not getting ready to move on the call. LOL
@@84953 you pause to listen to who, what, and where and this is why 🤣
@@fmartinjr What is that siren? Is it a VFD alarm/general fire alert sound for the community or is it an alarm in the house?
nice catch
Happened just this morning at 6am
"Oh...no problem....I pissed the bed when the tones went off....so I had to get up anyway"
I think dispatch figures if they're awake on a Sunday morning....we should be too
It happens.
Do you all have sleeping quarters at your station?
my station does
Mine does as well
@@Paxzis my station had the option to respond from home or you can stay at the station..
I always stayed at the station
There is quarters on the 3rd floor
@@fmartinjr does your agency have a website?
W...... why..... why are his pants off????
And why is the guy in the back doing his laundry in the gear washer?
These guys are real badass fire cowboys
Gear washer? Where do you see a gear washer? I mean I ain't saying that it ain't true but, where do you see a gear washer?
Aye but at least ur sirens go off haha
is this in NC?
I found them...Lighthouse Hill Apartments on Terra Hill Drive is in Wilmington, Delaware.
Tyfys hard charger
It be like that on them big jobs
Looks like my station😊
Who the hell takes their pants off before putting their gear on?
Who the hell, half awake, films something like this lmao? So weird to be filming a routine dispatch call…
I'm the one that films something like this.
If you don't like it, don't watch it!
Your azz came to watch it. Go sit down somewhere with that noise.
Who’s the clown that put his helmet on before any of his gear. Must be a newbie.
Who's the clown that would ask a question like that? Maybe he's the engineer. Maybe he's the IC.
All these clueless non-firefighting know-it-alls making comments.
@@ffemtx4 LOL!! That’s a good one. Yep. I’m a non fire anything. Only been been “fighting what you fear” long before you were even thought of. Long before your favorite place to fight a fire is from “ hitting it hard from the yard”.
geesh, ketchup d**ks
glad we got jolly vollies so the career guys can have a good laugh from time to time.
@@dannermanner5506 "...long before you were even thought of." You must be a gem to be on the job with. With all your assumptive, negativity. BTW...Been eating smoke since 1989. L.U. #2. I'm going to sound like you for a moment and guess YOU weren't even "thought of" at that time.
@@ffemtx4 how bout since ‘79. And I’m betting you’re the guy who runs to HR cause you got you’re feeling hurt. The reason that pranks are no long tolerable in your department. You’re the type that don’t belong in the service. So, go on and complain. See how well you be accepted at the table of hard knocks.
What is the name of this Fire Department and where is it also love ur vids
www.minquas23.com
seriously how slow can they go..... like dude stop texting on you phone. what a joke..... No wonder they realized it wasn't legit before they mounted up. All milling about disheveled looking clueless
You ever been a FF? Do you know how their "page out" systems work? Didn't think so.
@@ffemtx4 all I’m wondering is what made the dude filming decide he wanted to film. Seemed like he was just filming everyone for fun then it turned into a fake call lmao…
@@probablyabouttoargue3264 🤷♂️ 🤷♂️
Or most likely what really happened was they heard their tones and siren but not their station or unit numbers on the dispatch, the dude texting was looking on the fire dispatch app to see if he could find the call on his phone to see what it was. I used to do this when I was an officer to get the address and whatever details about said call.
@@BigBadBoy19 👈 EXACTLY what he said!!!
That man always drops his pants, to put his gear on also is this volunteer?
Yes
Yeah sucks when your getting paid to sleep . And the call to go to work turns out to be a false alarm. And you get to go back to sleep.
Waaa.... Waaa...Waaa....
When you have literally zero knowledge of the fire service, you leave comments like this…
Nah Joe,this is a mixed crew house.
Full time, part time, Volunteers coming from home, active Volunteers that live in quarters. The jawn that was closest to me is Volunteering at this house.
Probably was at 3am lets be honest
The time is announced in the video
Ugh... Wilmington.. HATE that city :/
This isn't The city ,this is the county.
@@fmartinjr ik, im just saying wilmington sucks cuz u showed it on the map lol
Back in the days when we was kids calling 911 making false Emergency prank sending them to locations
#ChristianaCare
Another panties and bra video
ruclips.net/video/XseaoTrMbO0/видео.html
www.minquas23.com
Who the fuck puts their helmet on first? VOLLIES!
Doesn't make a Difference Paid Fool !! Just as Long as they Have full turnout Gear on when Arriving At the Scene !
@@darrylking2500 says a vollie wanna be! Paid fool? Do you mean a career firefighter? Huge difference VOLLIE!
@@tracynshea1333 Show me on the doll where the “vollies” hurt you. Pathetic.
@@darrylking2500 so put the helmet on first then pull the hood over it? Spoken like a true vollie! Sorry it took me so long to respond but I was working my day shift
Quit your complaining! Be thankful they are doing it for free to protect people, like you!