blackemerald1
VIP Member
Which is still limiting their duties for no reason, and you are only basing that off one persons word. . . .
^Police are told what to do from their hierarchy. That hierarchy has a direct line in two directions.. to their subordinates
like @LuckiLee close relative. And their superiors who do actually tell them what to do. No one in emergency services makes up what they will or won't do randomly. There are always processes and procedures. Actually - well established and practiced procedures that are dynamic and updated daily.
Make no mistake, all emergency services will have been briefed about their responsibilities and the risks to the their members and ways to mitigate those risks. Same goes for all hospitals and the implementation of ways to mitigate risks to their role.
For instance, new procedures will be put in place to detect drink & drug driving.
Or, if you like, in the case of mental health patients who require police attendance, if a person's safety needs to be protected, and that includes the paramedics, they will attend. But only if needed. Decisions about who transports a person to a psych ward - will of course be made by command not individual police officers.
All emergency service organisation have a line of command.
And no, the public don't need to be told about ALL of the new processes and procedures that emergency service personnel have been briefed about. That's not helpful to the public or the services.
The police and the paramedics and the fire-brigade - indeed all of the emergency services do actually talk to each other.
Perhaps the subordinates on the ground are not privy to those high level discussions but they are happening. It's not all totally random and everyone to themselves.
I view it this way. This is panic right now. What it can quickly turn into is civil unrest. People out being insane. Police will be needed to keep the peace. Enforce the law. Fight the monsters that humans tend to turn into with mass panic. I think allocating job duties is important right now. Paramedics and hospital staff deal with the sick. Police keep the peace. If that makes sense.
^Yes it does make sense and yes you are on point. Police have a million other jobs to do too. They will not be shirking their responsibilities nor will hospital staff.
It's not about who is more important than another. If you are in one of these essential services then you will be required to turn up and do whatever you are told to do. That's the nature of the job. If for any reason, a person who belongs to one of these jobs, decides they don't want to do their job then I think they'll probably lose that job fairly rapidly and possibly face internal charges. Rightly so.