Police and firemen in Alameda, California watched a man drown on Monday after realizing they did not have proper certifications for water rescue, leaving them open to possible lawsuits if they attempted to save him.
The drowning victim, 53-year-old Raymond Zack, was apparently suicidal, according to a report from the scene. He waded out about 150 yards into cold waters off Crown Beach in Alameda and took about an hour to drown himself.
A crowd of about 75 gathered to watch the bizarre scene, which saw police and firemen just standing at shoreline watching helplessly. After the man had drowned, authorities couldnt even go into the surf to retrieve the body. They instead recruited a passer-by for the job.
City officials reportedly blamed the incident on budget cuts and said they would have a discussion about why Alameda, an island city, does not have proper authorization to rescue people from the waters surrounding it.
This video is from ABC 7 in San Francisco, Calif., broadcast May 30, 2011.
Here's the real headline: Government bureaucrats allow their customer to die.
Fire and rescue services can and should be privatized. There are many private rescue / ambulance services in the country and even some private fire services.
As a general rule, they do twice as good a job (using very measurable statistics) at half the cost of government services. In other words, they are 4 times better. Same with trash collection.
There is no reason whatsoever for the government to monopolize these things. Doing so puts us all at risk.
That's a Bowery Boys movie, right? From the 1930s. LOL.
When I was in high school in Michigan in 1976 I had to do a speech in social studies class. Mine was on why we should privatize trash collection.
Everyone, especially the teacher, went berserk. NO ONE will PAY... TRASH will PILE UP in the streets... RATS WILL BE EVERYWHERE!!!!!
Today, I live in Washington State where I have to directly pay a private company to pick up my trash. People DO pay. Trash is NOT piling up in the streets. Rats are NOT everywhere.
In fact, private trash companies are 6 times more efficient than their government counterparts. 6 times.
The people in my high school class were such unimaginative people that they simply didn't have the mental bandwidth to understand how something could be both different and better. You are one of those people.