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Date: 24 Sep 2006 17:05:24
From: greggery peccary
Subject: i called the cops! (rant)
biking home through fremont during their "octoberfest" (ya they have it in
sept.) weekend is dangerous! commuting home at night through this area of
bars & nightclubs is usually a hassle but last night was ridiculous. traffic
was terrible at 12:30am. i saw two sudden u-turns in traffic -one swerving
right in front of me. another cut me off to turn right. luckily i was going
up a steep hill. i stopped as quickly as i could & when i got started again
another ran the red light & crossed right in front of me! i saw an obviously
drunk man get into his driver seat and planty of other obviously drunk
drivers and NO police presence! when i got up to 44th i called 911 to tell
them to send a car down to fremont to get people to mellow out & pay
attention. the 911 operator wanted exact location & i said "look if you live
in this city you know where fremont is" she said she could not dispatch an
officer without an exect location. so i told her an intersection and soon
after saw a squad car heading down there. now my question is this: if they
really want to stop people from dui, why do they wait and get them when it's
too late? why dont they just wait near the bar or beer garden? it gets crazy
when they have these festivals that get everybody sauced & then close at
12am & nobody has time to sober up before driving! i am not the vigilante
type and dont know if calling 911 was the right thing, but if the presence
of that squad car made some people more minful of driving safely maybe it
saved someone (maybe the next biker after me!)
-alan






 
Date: 26 Sep 2006 11:20:35
From:
Subject: Re: i called the cops! (rant)

greggery peccary wrote:
> biking home through fremont during their "octoberfest" (ya they have it in
> sept.) weekend is dangerous! commuting home at night through this area of
> bars & nightclubs is usually a hassle but last night was ridiculous. traffic
> was terrible at 12:30am. i saw two sudden u-turns in traffic -one swerving
> right in front of me. another cut me off to turn right. luckily i was going
> up a steep hill. i stopped as quickly as i could & when i got started again
> another ran the red light & crossed right in front of me! i saw an obviously
> drunk man get into his driver seat and planty of other obviously drunk
> drivers and NO police presence! when i got up to 44th i called 911 to tell
> them to send a car down to fremont to get people to mellow out & pay
> attention. the 911 operator wanted exact location & i said "look if you live
> in this city you know where fremont is" she said she could not dispatch an
> officer without an exect location. so i told her an intersection and soon
> after saw a squad car heading down there. now my question is this: if they
> really want to stop people from dui, why do they wait and get them when it's
> too late? why dont they just wait near the bar or beer garden? it gets crazy
> when they have these festivals that get everybody sauced & then close at
> 12am & nobody has time to sober up before driving! i am not the vigilante
> type and dont know if calling 911 was the right thing, but if the presence
> of that squad car made some people more minful of driving safely maybe it
> saved someone (maybe the next biker after me!)
> -alan

Alan,

Work with local law enforcement, local government to get a checkpoint
scheduled in that area. A few of those would have a tremendous effect
on drivers.

-bdbafh



 
Date: 26 Sep 2006 06:25:39
From: AustinMN
Subject: Re: i called the cops! (rant)
Joshua Putnam wrote:
> In article <1159214409.658723.294440@h48g2000cwc.googlegroups.com>,
> tacooper260@hotmail.com says...
>
> > It does nobody any good to be the 49th person to report something (or
> > even the 3rd, for that matter).
>
> In any area with reasonably good emergency funding, response times will
> be pretty fast -- if you don't see fire and aid already on the scene, or
> coming up in your rear-view mirror, it's *not* safe to assume anyone
> else has already reported the incident. I recall one local incident on
> a busy freeway where, apparently, everyone assumed someone else had
> already called, leaving the injured motorist along side the road for
> more than half an hour before a passing trooper stopped.

If it was the same area as the OP, dozens of people attempted to call,
but after waiting 30 minutes, they all gave up.

Austin



 
Date: 25 Sep 2006 18:39:42
From: Dennis P. Harris
Subject: Re: i called the cops! (rant)
On Sun, 24 Sep 2006 17:05:24 -0700 in rec.bicycles.misc,
"greggery peccary" <.@. > wrote:

> if they
> really want to stop people from dui, why do they wait and get them when it's
> too late? why dont they just wait near the bar or beer garden? it gets crazy
> when they have these festivals that get everybody sauced & then close at
> 12am & nobody has time to sober up before driving! i am not the vigilante
> type and dont know if calling 911 was the right thing, but if the presence
> of that squad car made some people more minful of driving safely maybe it
> saved someone (maybe the next biker after me!)

you were right to call, and you should carry a cell phone and
call in every damned drunk or aggressive driver you see.

cops don't sit outside bars because in many cases they are
already busy with domestic violence calls, bar fights, and other
alcohol related crimes.

keep on calling them in. in my state, you can get $25 if your
call leads to the arrest of a drunk driver. there may be a
similar program in your area, and it could help pay your
cellphone bill.



 
Date: 25 Sep 2006 14:43:48
From: AustinMN
Subject: Re: i called the cops! (rant)
treynolds@my-deja.com wrote:
> AustinMN wrote:
> > treynolds@my-deja.com wrote:
> > > The 911 system is another subject. In today's politics it is political
> > > suicide for any representitive to suggest raising taxes. So things
> > > like the 911 system and a larger police force suffer. Here in San
> > > Diego, a friend I was riding with did a face plant and while he was
> > > lying unconsious on the ground I had the pleasure of listening to seven
> > > minutes of the Highway Patrol 911 service telling me to stay on the
> > > line and wait for the next operator.
> >
> > This isn't caused by underfunded 911; it's caused by everyone wanting
> > to be a hero. A single incident on the highway will often generate 200
> > calls, as each passing motorist calls it in.
> >
> Why is that is a bad thing?

Didn't you say it took several minutes for them to answer your call? I
thought the connection was obvious.

> The 911 system is for emergencies. If it
> were staffed at a level to equal to the call load then this would not
> be an issue.

200 calls. 1 emergency, 199 totally useless and utterly uncessesary
calls by hero wanabies.

Don't make the call unless you have a very good reason for doing so (or
a reasonable belief that nobody else has called). Seeing an accident
scene (where you did not witness the accident itself) is only a good
911 call if traffic is *extremely* light.

> And no, I don't mind my state income or sales tax being raised to pay
> for it.

I'd rather they pay for respondents (i.e. police/fire/ambulance). You
want one officer and 13 dispatchers. I'd rather have two officers and
one dispatcher. Guess which one costs more (and which is more
effective)?

Austin



  
Date: 25 Sep 2006 16:03:22
From: brink
Subject: Re: i called the cops! (rant)

"AustinMN" <tacooper260@hotmail.com > wrote in message
news:1159220628.509780.72680@k70g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...
> treynolds@my-deja.com wrote:
>> AustinMN wrote:
>> > treynolds@my-deja.com wrote:
>> > > The 911 system is another subject. In today's politics it is
>> > > political
>> > > suicide for any representitive to suggest raising taxes. So things
>> > > like the 911 system and a larger police force suffer. Here in San
>> > > Diego, a friend I was riding with did a face plant and while he was
>> > > lying unconsious on the ground I had the pleasure of listening to
>> > > seven
>> > > minutes of the Highway Patrol 911 service telling me to stay on the
>> > > line and wait for the next operator.
>> >
>> > This isn't caused by underfunded 911; it's caused by everyone wanting
>> > to be a hero. A single incident on the highway will often generate 200
>> > calls, as each passing motorist calls it in.
>> >
>> Why is that is a bad thing?
>
> Didn't you say it took several minutes for them to answer your call? I
> thought the connection was obvious.
>
>> The 911 system is for emergencies. If it
>> were staffed at a level to equal to the call load then this would not
>> be an issue.
>
> 200 calls. 1 emergency, 199 totally useless and utterly uncessesary
> calls by hero wanabies.

Hmm. Let me respectfully disagree with you.

I am just as reluctant to call 911 and "bother someone unnecessarily" but
tell you what, I will almost always call if I see something potentially
dangerous. Usually it's when driving; say, some huge obstruction that has
fallen out of a truck lying in the middle of the freeway.

I always ask the dispatcher first thing, "Have you gotten any calls about
(such and such)?" If they have, we're done and I won't waste their time.
However, I'm shocked with how often I'm the first person they've heard from
about the situation. Only once did I hear "Yes, we've already received a
report." Every other time I'm glad I took the initiative to call.

I think disparaging people as "hero wannabes" is unnecessary as well; I
believe most people are trying to do the right thing and I think it's unwise
to discourage people from doing so. I agree that people should use
discretion -- if there are already cops at the scene, there is probably no
reason to make a call... ;-) However, I think a lot of incidents go
unreported by the people who first see them and in many cases even a few
minutes can be crucial.

I would much rather err on the side of making the call than *maybe* saving
someone some time and trouble. But that's me.

brink




 
Date: 25 Sep 2006 13:34:40
From: treynolds@my-deja.com
Subject: Re: i called the cops! (rant)

AustinMN wrote:
> treynolds@my-deja.com wrote:
> > The 911 system is another subject. In today's politics it is political
> > suicide for any representitive to suggest raising taxes. So things
> > like the 911 system and a larger police force suffer. Here in San
> > Diego, a friend I was riding with did a face plant and while he was
> > lying unconsious on the ground I had the pleasure of listening to seven
> > minutes of the Highway Patrol 911 service telling me to stay on the
> > line and wait for the next operator.
>
> This isn't caused by underfunded 911; it's caused by everyone wanting
> to be a hero. A single incident on the highway will often generate 200
> calls, as each passing motorist calls it in.
>
Why is that is a bad thing? The 911 system is for emergencies. If it
were staffed at a level to equal to the call load then this would not
be an issue.

And no, I don't mind my state income or sales tax being raised to pay
for it.

> As far as 911 cell phone calls, you need to keep in mind that the
> operator may be hundreds of miles away; cellular 911 does not
> necessarily go to a local dispatcher. This may vary from state to
> state.
>
I'm aware of that. As I indicated in my first post, my cellular 911
call went to the Highway Patrol. The operators are in Irvine who, once
they answered, routed it to San Diego Police. The officer who arrived
told me that it sometimes takes 30 minutes for the CHP 911 service to
pick up.

Sheriffs deputies and San Diego Police that I have encountered (in
situations such as these) have told me to use a landline if its
available.

Tom



  
Date: 25 Sep 2006 18:45:36
From: Dennis P. Harris
Subject: Re: i called the cops! (rant)
On 25 Sep 2006 13:34:40 -0700 in rec.bicycles.misc,
"treynolds@my-deja.com" <thomas.treynolds@gmail.com > wrote:

> As I indicated in my first post, my cellular 911
> call went to the Highway Patrol. The operators are in Irvine who, once
> they answered, routed it to San Diego Police. The officer who arrived
> told me that it sometimes takes 30 minutes for the CHP 911 service to
> pick up.

so write a letter to ahnold and tell him to fix it before the
election! better yet, write a letter to the editor complaining
that he hasn't fixed it and maybe he will before the election.
;^)



 
Date: 25 Sep 2006 13:00:09
From: AustinMN
Subject: Re: i called the cops! (rant)
treynolds@my-deja.com wrote:
> The 911 system is another subject. In today's politics it is political
> suicide for any representitive to suggest raising taxes. So things
> like the 911 system and a larger police force suffer. Here in San
> Diego, a friend I was riding with did a face plant and while he was
> lying unconsious on the ground I had the pleasure of listening to seven
> minutes of the Highway Patrol 911 service telling me to stay on the
> line and wait for the next operator.

This isn't caused by underfunded 911; it's caused by everyone wanting
to be a hero. A single incident on the highway will often generate 200
calls, as each passing motorist calls it in.

My wife once called me and asked that I report a dead animal on the
road. I asked if she saw it happen, she had not. I didn't want to
report it, but she insisted. So I looked up animal control, and they
told me it aparently happened just a few minutes earlier, but they had
taken 40 calls about it.

I will not call 911 unless:
* I am personally involved;
* I witnessed the incident and am willing to testify;
* I am specifically requested to do so by someone who is involved or is
a witness.

It does nobody any good to be the 49th person to report something (or
even the 3rd, for that matter).

As far as 911 cell phone calls, you need to keep in mind that the
operator may be hundreds of miles away; cellular 911 does not
necessarily go to a local dispatcher. This may vary from state to
state.

Austin



  
Date: 25 Sep 2006 21:31:42
From: Joshua Putnam
Subject: Re: i called the cops! (rant)
In article <1159214409.658723.294440@h48g2000cwc.googlegroups.com >,
tacooper260@hotmail.com says...

> It does nobody any good to be the 49th person to report something (or
> even the 3rd, for that matter).

By the 49th call the chance of providing useful information is getting
slim, but the third or fourth call is often still useful -- not everyone
knows what milepost they're at, or knows local geography well enough to
give other landks for dispatch. The initial caller may have gotten
the directions wrong, Northbound 5 instead of Southbound 5, or just
north of the exit rather than just south of it.

In any area with reasonably good emergency funding, response times will
be pretty fast -- if you don't see fire and aid already on the scene, or
coming up in your rear-view mirror, it's *not* safe to assume anyone
else has already reported the incident. I recall one local incident on
a busy freeway where, apparently, everyone assumed someone else had
already called, leaving the injured motorist along side the road for
more than half an hour before a passing trooper stopped.

--
josh@phred.org is Joshua Putnam
<http://www.phred.org/~josh/ >
Braze your own bicycle frames. See
<http://www.phred.org/~josh/build/build.html >


 
Date: 25 Sep 2006 09:29:24
From: treynolds@my-deja.com
Subject: Re: i called the cops! (rant)

greggery peccary wrote:
> biking home through fremont during their "octoberfest" (ya they have it in
> sept.) weekend is dangerous! commuting home at night through this area of
> bars & nightclubs is usually a hassle but last night was ridiculous. traffic
> .......
> of that squad car made some people more minful of driving safely maybe it
> saved someone (maybe the next biker after me!)
> -alan

First, you certainly did the right thing to call 911 after witnessing
drunk drivers. Public service announcements encourage it. People
shouldn't hesitate to report it along with the license plates of drunk
drivers.

The 911 system is another subject. In today's politics it is political
suicide for any representitive to suggest raising taxes. So things
like the 911 system and a larger police force suffer. Here in San
Diego, a friend I was riding with did a face plant and while he was
lying unconsious on the ground I had the pleasure of listening to seven
minutes of the Highway Patrol 911 service telling me to stay on the
line and wait for the next operator.

Tom



 
Date: 25 Sep 2006 06:01:43
From: Mike Jacoubowsky
Subject: Re: i called the cops! (rant)
> i called 911 to tell
> them to send a car down to fremont to get people to mellow out & pay
> attention. the 911 operator wanted exact location & i said "look if you
> live
> in this city you know where fremont is" she said she could not dispatch an
> officer without an exect location.

Which "Fremont" were you in? If this was Fremont, California, calling 911
got you the CHP dispatch facility in Vacaville, California. And likely
somebody who had no idea where 44th street was.

I suspect it's a different Fremont, since your email implies you're posting
from the University of Washington, but it could be the same scenario there
as here... that 911 calls are routed to a regional dispatch center, run by
the Highway Patrol or equivalent.

> biking home through fremont during their "octoberfest" (ya they have it in
> sept.) weekend is dangerous! commuting home at night through this area of
> bars & nightclubs is usually a hassle but last night was ridiculous.
> traffic
> was terrible at 12:30am.

Are there any other routes you might choose? Doesn't sound like that one's
very safe regardless of whether there's an "Octoberfest" or not.

--Mike-- Chain Reaction Bicycles
www.ChainReactionBicycles.com


"greggery peccary" <.@. > wrote in message
news:ef76g4$cq8$1@gnus01.u.washington.edu...
> biking home through fremont during their "octoberfest" (ya they have it in
> sept.) weekend is dangerous! commuting home at night through this area of
> bars & nightclubs is usually a hassle but last night was ridiculous.
> traffic
> was terrible at 12:30am. i saw two sudden u-turns in traffic -one swerving
> right in front of me. another cut me off to turn right. luckily i was
> going
> up a steep hill. i stopped as quickly as i could & when i got started
> again
> another ran the red light & crossed right in front of me! i saw an
> obviously
> drunk man get into his driver seat and planty of other obviously drunk
> drivers and NO police presence! when i got up to 44th i called 911 to tell
> them to send a car down to fremont to get people to mellow out & pay
> attention. the 911 operator wanted exact location & i said "look if you
> live
> in this city you know where fremont is" she said she could not dispatch an
> officer without an exect location. so i told her an intersection and soon
> after saw a squad car heading down there. now my question is this: if they
> really want to stop people from dui, why do they wait and get them when
> it's
> too late? why dont they just wait near the bar or beer garden? it gets
> crazy
> when they have these festivals that get everybody sauced & then close at
> 12am & nobody has time to sober up before driving! i am not the vigilante
> type and dont know if calling 911 was the right thing, but if the presence
> of that squad car made some people more minful of driving safely maybe it
> saved someone (maybe the next biker after me!)
> -alan
>
>




  
Date: 24 Sep 2006 23:52:33
From: greggery peccary
Subject: Re: i called the cops! (rant)

"Mike Jacoubowsky" <mikej1@ix.netcom.com > wrote in message
news:bhKRg.7859$Ij.7409@newssvr14.news.prodigy.com...
> > i called 911 to tell
> > them to send a car down to fremont to get people to mellow out & pay
> > attention. the 911 operator wanted exact location & i said "look if you
> > live
> > in this city you know where fremont is" she said she could not dispatch
an
> > officer without an exect location.
>
> Which "Fremont" were you in? If this was Fremont, California, calling 911
> got you the CHP dispatch facility in Vacaville, California. And likely
> somebody who had no idea where 44th street was.
>
> I suspect it's a different Fremont, since your email implies you're
posting
> from the University of Washington, but it could be the same scenario there
> as here... that 911 calls are routed to a regional dispatch center, run by
> the Highway Patrol or equivalent.
>

oops, fremont district in seattle. a trendy spot for the young faux hipster
crowd.

>
> Are there any other routes you might choose? Doesn't sound like that one's
> very safe regardless of whether there's an "Octoberfest" or not.
>

not really. there's a ship canal between me and home. my 3 options are very
scary aurora bridge (the traffic lanes are narrow and autos go about 50 mph,
curb is ~20"high, sidewalk is partitioned off rail posts threaten to grab
handlebars & send cyclist plummetting 150' or so into ship canal or onto
rooftops-it's a local fave suicide spot). ballard bridge similar but not as
high (not as good for suicides either). the route in post is actually a bike
lane!




   
Date: 25 Sep 2006 14:21:12
From: Ludmila Borgschatz-Thudpucker, MD
Subject: Re: i called the cops! (rant)

"greggery peccary" <.@. > wrote in message
news:ef7ubh$ulq$1@gnus01.u.washington.edu...
>
> oops, fremont district in seattle. a trendy spot for the young faux
> hipster
> crowd.

How do you know this? Did you check all their hips?




 
Date: 24 Sep 2006 22:05:45
From: peter
Subject: Re: i called the cops! (rant)
greggery peccary wrote:

> I agree. i dont like being surveilled myself. my thinking is that with just
> a presence, like maybe one squad car in the area will make people be more
> mindful about their driving, drunk or not. thanks for the comment.

Apparently they do sometimes directly go after specific bars and their
customers:
http://www.dui.com/states/california/dui_library/drunk_driving_laws.html

But I'm not sure how effective such programs are likely to be since the
word will probably spread pretty quick about which bars to avoid and it
may just result in people driving even farther to other bars that don't
have such an operation underway. Meanwhile the owners and managers of
the targeted bars are likely to get upset about lost sales and pressure
the city government to cut back on the program.

OTOH, just providing more police presence in an area when there's a
special event that's likely to cause problems seems reasonable and
inline with normal police practice.



 
Date: 24 Sep 2006 20:45:54
From: Paul Hobson
Subject: Re: i called the cops! (rant)
greggery peccary wrote:
> biking home through fremont during their "octoberfest" (ya they have it in
> sept.) weekend is dangerous!

that's when oktoberfest should be! :)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oktoberfest

[nearly getting hit by drunks snipped]

> now my question is this: if they
> really want to stop people from dui, why do they wait and get them when it's
> too late? why dont they just wait near the bar or beer garden? it gets crazy
> when they have these festivals that get everybody sauced & then close at
> 12am & nobody has time to sober up before driving! i am not the vigilante
> type and dont know if calling 911 was the right thing, but if the presence
> of that squad car made some people more minful of driving safely maybe it
> saved someone (maybe the next biker after me!)
> -alan

I know what you're thinking and in a lot of ways, I agree. But I think
that does start to walk a fine line of being too surveilant. Was it a
city Texas who had the police officers inside the bars arresting people
before they even left? It's a tricky dilema - that's for certain.



  
Date: 25 Sep 2006 20:09:10
From: Werehatrack
Subject: Re: i called the cops! (rant)
On 24 Sep 2006 20:45:54 -0700, "Paul Hobson" <pmhobson@gmail.com >
wrote:

>.. Was it a
>city [in] Texas who had the police officers inside the bars arresting people
>before they even left? It's a tricky dilema - that's for certain.

I haven't heard of this happening in Texas, but ISTR seeing a news
article about people getting arrested for public intoxication when
being hauled home from bars in taxis; I believe it was in either
Kansas or Missouri. The report posited that the cops had been
monitoring the taxi radio dispatch, and that they were stopping the
cabs when they knew the unit had a fare from a bar. This raised the
obvious questions of whether there was a public right to get blitzed
as long as you were going to do so in a safe and courteous manner, as
well as the question of whether the tactic would result in drunks
deciding to drive home rather than risk getting nailed in a cab whose
origin and destination the cops would know from the dispatch data.

Stupidity is not the exclusive prerogative of the upper echelons.
--
Typoes are a feature, not a bug.
Some gardening required to reply via email.
Words processed in a facility that contains nuts.


  
Date: 24 Sep 2006 21:25:33
From: greggery peccary
Subject: Re: i called the cops! (rant)

"Paul Hobson" <pmhobson@gmail.com > wrote in message
news:1159155954.900763.286280@m73g2000cwd.googlegroups.com...
> greggery peccary wrote:
> > biking home through fremont during their "octoberfest" (ya they have it
in
> > sept.) weekend is dangerous!
>
> that's when oktoberfest should be! :)
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oktoberfest
>
> [nearly getting hit by drunks snipped]
>
> > now my question is this: if they
> > really want to stop people from dui, why do they wait and get them when
it's
> > too late? why dont they just wait near the bar or beer garden? it gets
crazy
> > when they have these festivals that get everybody sauced & then close at
> > 12am & nobody has time to sober up before driving! i am not the
vigilante
> > type and dont know if calling 911 was the right thing, but if the
presence
> > of that squad car made some people more minful of driving safely maybe
it
> > saved someone (maybe the next biker after me!)
> > -alan
>
> I know what you're thinking and in a lot of ways, I agree. But I think
> that does start to walk a fine line of being too surveilant. Was it a
> city Texas who had the police officers inside the bars arresting people
> before they even left? It's a tricky dilema - that's for certain.
>

I agree. i dont like being surveilled myself. my thinking is that with just
a presence, like maybe one squad car in the area will make people be more
mindful about their driving, drunk or not. thanks for the comment.




 
Date: 24 Sep 2006 19:34:09
From: Kenny
Subject: Re: i called the cops! (rant)

greggery peccary wrote:
> > Ever been to a communist country where EVERYONE is a civil servant? No
> > one gives a rats ass about anything except collecting the paycheck and
> > getting off work.
> >
>
> ah...what's you point or are you just OT or troll? yes i have been to a
> communist country: china. there people care mostly about the same things as
> everyone else in the world.

China 1980?



  
Date: 24 Sep 2006 19:56:53
From: greggery peccary
Subject: Re: i called the cops! (rant)

"Kenny" <Postoasted@gmail.com > wrote in message
news:1159151649.109924.176430@i42g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...
>
> greggery peccary wrote:
> > > Ever been to a communist country where EVERYONE is a civil servant? No
> > > one gives a rats ass about anything except collecting the paycheck and
> > > getting off work.
> > >
> >
> > ah...what's you point or are you just OT or troll? yes i have been to a
> > communist country: china. there people care mostly about the same things
as
> > everyone else in the world.
>
> China 1980?
>

uh...no...2003 why? if you are talking about surveillance society i get your
point but what does this potential political argument really have to do with
drunken drivers in fremont? are you suggesting that i should just let drunks
drive? live and let bicyclist die?




 
Date: 24 Sep 2006 20:05:04
From: Earl Bollinger
Subject: Re: i called the cops! (rant)
"greggery peccary" <.@. > wrote in message
news:ef76g4$cq8$1@gnus01.u.washington.edu...
> biking home through fremont during their "octoberfest" (ya they have it in
> sept.) weekend is dangerous! commuting home at night through this area of
> bars & nightclubs is usually a hassle but last night was ridiculous.
> traffic
> was terrible at 12:30am. i saw two sudden u-turns in traffic -one swerving
> right in front of me. another cut me off to turn right. luckily i was
> going
> up a steep hill. i stopped as quickly as i could & when i got started
> again
> another ran the red light & crossed right in front of me! i saw an
> obviously
> drunk man get into his driver seat and planty of other obviously drunk
> drivers and NO police presence! when i got up to 44th i called 911 to tell
> them to send a car down to fremont to get people to mellow out & pay
> attention. the 911 operator wanted exact location & i said "look if you
> live
> in this city you know where fremont is" she said she could not dispatch an
> officer without an exect location. so i told her an intersection and soon
> after saw a squad car heading down there. now my question is this: if they
> really want to stop people from dui, why do they wait and get them when
> it's
> too late? why dont they just wait near the bar or beer garden? it gets
> crazy
> when they have these festivals that get everybody sauced & then close at
> 12am & nobody has time to sober up before driving! i am not the vigilante
> type and dont know if calling 911 was the right thing, but if the presence
> of that squad car made some people more minful of driving safely maybe it
> saved someone (maybe the next biker after me!)
> -alan
>
>
I don't think it hurt anything except maybe a driver getting caught DUI. So
yes you might have saved another person's life, not just a cyclist either.
Unfortunately about 80 DUI drivers get away for every one that is caught. It
takes one DUI specialist officer several hours just to process one DUI
driver, usually more on a busy night.
The court systems have unfortunately pretty much eliminated the police
sitting outside a bar when it lets out and arresting everyone for DUI as
they drive off erratically.
So the polce have to catch them away from a bar driving erratically.







 
Date: 24 Sep 2006 17:28:16
From: Kenny
Subject: Re: i called the cops! (rant)

greggery peccary wrote:
> biking home through fremont during their "octoberfest" (ya they have it in
> sept.) weekend is dangerous! commuting home at night through this area of
> bars & nightclubs is usually a hassle but last night was ridiculous. traffic
> was terrible at 12:30am. i saw two sudden u-turns in traffic -one swerving
> right in front of me. another cut me off to turn right. luckily i was going
> up a steep hill. i stopped as quickly as i could & when i got started again
> another ran the red light & crossed right in front of me! i saw an obviously
> drunk man get into his driver seat and planty of other obviously drunk
> drivers and NO police presence! when i got up to 44th i called 911 to tell
> them to send a car down to fremont to get people to mellow out & pay
> attention. the 911 operator wanted exact location & i said "look if you live
> in this city you know where fremont is" she said she could not dispatch an
> officer without an exect location. so i told her an intersection and soon
> after saw a squad car heading down there. now my question is this: if they
> really want to stop people from dui, why do they wait and get them when it's
> too late? why dont they just wait near the bar or beer garden? it gets crazy
> when they have these festivals that get everybody sauced & then close at
> 12am & nobody has time to sober up before driving! i am not the vigilante
> type and dont know if calling 911 was the right thing, but if the presence
> of that squad car made some people more minful of driving safely maybe it
> saved someone (maybe the next biker after me!)
> -alan
Ever been to a communist country where EVERYONE is a civil servant? No
one gives a rats ass about anything except collecting the paycheck and
getting off work.



  
Date: 25 Sep 2006 19:05:46
From: John Thompson
Subject: Re: i called the cops! (rant)
On 2006-09-25, Kenny <Postoasted@gmail.com > wrote:

> Ever been to a communist country where EVERYONE is a civil servant? No
> one gives a rats ass about anything except collecting the paycheck and
> getting off work.

Yes, I have as a matter of fact. Although there were many problems with
the so-called "communist" governments, lack civic pride was not one of
them. I remember old babushkas out sweeping the streets just because they
felt they needed sweeping, and walking around alone in Leningrad at 1:00AM
and feeling perfectly safe. By all accounts that is no longer possible.

--

-John (john@os2.dhs.org)


  
Date: 24 Sep 2006 18:43:21
From: greggery peccary
Subject: Re: i called the cops! (rant)
> Ever been to a communist country where EVERYONE is a civil servant? No
> one gives a rats ass about anything except collecting the paycheck and
> getting off work.
>

ah...what's you point or are you just OT or troll? yes i have been to a
communist country: china. there people care mostly about the same things as
everyone else in the world.