weather, I agree that the siren goes off way too often. Every time someone
calls 911 needing our assistance, the siren blows. If people didn’t have
fires in their homes, the siren wouldn't go off. If children didn’t fall
into the river and get swept away by the current, the siren wouldn’t go
off. If driver’s wouldn’t crash or rollover their cars by driving like
maniacs on 422, the siren wouldn’t go off. If people would stop having
medical emergencies in their homes where EMS calls for assistance from the Fire
Company, the siren wouldn’t go off. The list goes on.
caution because firefighters will be responding to the station and fire trucks
will soon be exiting, that is NOT its primary purpose. Similarly, although
we are a 100% volunteer organization, the siren is not a fund raising
tool. Every time you hear the siren, it’s because one of your ‘neighbors’
called needing help, and we need to utilize every means possible to alert our
volunteers to respond. We have also been told many times that hearing the siren after calling for help assures them that help is on the way.
when traveling though the surrounding area? How about when inside a local
building? Has your battery ever gone dead? Do you wear your phone
when working out in the yard and can you hear it over the sound of the lawn
mower? Do you wear it in the pool? Have you ever left the house and
forgotten to bring it with you? Yes, technology is a wonderful
thing...when it works. We routinely have members show up solely because
one of these things happened, but they still heard the siren sounding and
responded to the call for help. If it were you or your loved ones in need
of assistance, wouldn't you want us to show up with enough people to properly
and promptly render assistance?
that is built or new business that opens up. But whenever the call for
help comes in, we leave dinner on the table, miss our children's sporting
events, forego Thanksgiving dinner with our families, etc. It’s just what
we do. So rather than think about how the siren may be temporarily
inconveniencing you when it goes off, why not think about the brave men and
women who volunteer to risk their lives to protect you, or the people who have
called at some of the lowest moments of their lives in need of our services, or
the $3.6 million that the volunteer firefighters serving Upper Providence
Township save the taxpayers each and every year, and say a prayer for
everyone to return home safely to their families at the end of the
day.



