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Sharing the road with emergency vehicles
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Who is entitled
to use a blue light?
As well as the Police, Fire and
Ambulance services, the following are also permitted to carry and
use blue lights when required:-
- Mines Rescue
Service
- Mountain Rescue
Teams
- Coastguard Service
- Bomb Disposal
Teams
- Human Tissue for
Transplant Vehicles
- National Blood
Service
- Life Boat
Launching Vehicles
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Delaying
any of these services from attending an emergency could cost lives.
Most delays are caused by inappropriate driver reaction when they
encounter these vehicles with their blue lights and sirens on... in
other words they tend to PANIC!! What can you do to HELP?
Look and Listen
Looking and listening form part of the
everyday task of driving, however they are not necessarily the same as
seeing and hearing. If you think you may have seen a blue flashing
light or heard a siren consider - lowering the window, turning down
the radio etc., in order to enhance the looking and listening
opportunity.
Signal Your Intentions
To enable the emergency service driver
to make a better judgement of your intentions, indicate to them what
you intend to do using you indicators or even hand or arm signals.
Pull in Safely
Try to identify a place where you can
pull in, which does not create a further obstruction for instance,
alongside bollards. Never put yourself or any other road user at risk
when you pull in - be particularly aware of pedestrians, cyclists and
other vehicles around you.
Pull in as far as you can
Once you have identified a place where
you think it is safe, pull in as far as you can. Avoid places where
you can only get the front of your vehicle in, which would leave the
back sticking out, or along side vehicles already parked especially in
narrow roads.
On some types of roads e.g. dual
carriageways and one way streets it may be beneficial to pull into the
right depending upon your position and that of the emergency vehicle.
Leave a Gap
When you have pulled in remember to
leave a gap that is large enough for the emergency vehicle to get
through-considering its size, length and weight of the emergency
vehicle trying to get past. Bear in mind also that if you pull into
the mouth of a road or entrance to a school or factory etc., to let an
emergency vehicle pass, it may be intending to turn into that road or
entrance.
Stay Alert
It is not uncommon for more than one
vehicle, or more than one emergency service to attend the same
incident. Consideration must be given once an emergency vehicle has
passed as there may be others following that are hidden from sight by
the first one. They may of course be coming from a different
direction. So even when an emergency vehicle has passed you, keep
looking and listening for any other emergency vehicles that are
approaching before you continue your journey.
Don't PANIC
It is widely known and recognised that
the panic reaction in drivers is usually caused by a combination of
the sudden awareness of an emergency vehicle being in close proximity
and a desire to make a clear path for such vehicles. The emergency
service drivers appreciate these efforts.
By following this advice drivers should
be able to provide a clear passage for emergency vehicles without
endangering themselves or other road users.
Parking
When you park your vehicle on a road,
even for a short time, consider if the emergency services especially
those with larger vehicles can get past safely. This is particularly
important in narrow residential roads. Do not park too close to
corners and junctions as some emergency vehicles require larger
turning circles.
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