Gravenhurst Volunteer Fire Department
Your Muskoka Fire Safety Resource
Seconds Can SaveEach year emergency vehicles respond to hundreds of thousands of emergency calls across Ontario. In Gravenhurst we respond between 300 and 350 calls each year. Whether it is the police responding to a robbery, an ambulance rushing for a heart attack call or one of our fire engines enroute to save a family from a house fire, each emergency service has one thing in common; the need to get there and administer help as fast as possible. Everything we do is aimed at getting the help people need as quickly and efficiently as possible. We have a special phone number (9-1-1) to speed your call to us, vehicles equipped with lights and sirens to clear traffic so we can get there safely without being held up in traffic. But in order for this to work, everyone, including other drivers and pedestrians need to know their role in order to help us save lives! Remeber ..... Seconds Can Save! After all it may be your house we're responding to, your family member that needs medical attention or your friends that need the police. Help Us Help You! |
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Opticom Gives Right-of-Way
Gravenhurst's traffic lights are currently being modified by the District of Muskoka to include Opticom system traffic pre-emption. The system works by receiving a special coded signal from a light on the fire truck. It then pre-empts the normal light pattern to give a green light to the responding fire trucks. Currently the traffic signals at Muskoka/James, North Muldrew/Bay and the pedestrian crosswalk at Boston Pizza are outfitted with Opticom. There are more to come in the next few months with completion of the program in expected in 2010.Move Over or Pay Up
The Ontario Highway Traffic Act states that motorists have to slow down and move to a lane furthest from the parked emergency vehicle on the side of a road in an attempt to protect police, ambulance, and firefighters. This will protect emergency personnel from being hit from behind by approaching vehicles while tending to emergency calls. The legislation will apply to all stopped vehicles with flashing red lights, excluding school buses.
Those convicted of disobeying the law will be fined a minimum of $400 and a maximum of $2,000 for a first offence, depending on the seriousness of the offence. For second and subsequent convictions, the fine is a minimum of $1,000 and a maximum of $4,000, six months in jail, or both a fine and jail sentence. All convictions will result in the addition of three demerit points to a driver's record. The court can also suspend a motorist's driver's license for up to two years.
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