Awesome job. I love the officer. He has a great way of putting things. Hopefully he is involved in counseling with crisis care for the dept. because he would be a very good asset. I was an officer for 7 years in Arizona
Almost all calls are ran as emergent until someone on scene to determine, especially when the ems provider may be farther out because of another call not to mention the everyday traffic creating extended response time. Alot of the strictly fire service who donot provide ambulance response but provides ALS/BLS ems assist, get very little information tone the call and get the information after you already have someone enroute. You also cant count on the caller to give the dispatcher correct information
😂 We do NOT assist with bedbugs. We DO however need to be aware of them when entering a home to assist this elderly bariatric patient off the floor when he can’t help himself. The call was coded emergent because it was a fall with injury.
Tulsa has 4-5 assigned to each rig, with a minimum daily staffing of 3-4 depending on the company. We have 45 fire companies across 31 stations and plenty of hands when we need them.
Wow. Felt like a true movie, it was edited good, looked good, had good audio, and everything was just good.
This is such a well made documentary, the first documentary where I didn’t get bored watching it!
Was interesting. Not a firefighter but learn a lot from Videos. Know Slo fire in California.. good friends.
Awesome job. I love the officer. He has a great way of putting things. Hopefully he is involved in counseling with crisis care for the dept. because he would be a very good asset. I was an officer for 7 years in Arizona
Great documentary of a great station!
Amazing job! Really enjoyed it only negative is this is your only one! Can’t wait for more great work!!
Nice documentary of Station 20.
Great work. Tulsa seems like one of the most desirable depts to work for in the country.
Have you ever watched their response videos? 5 star stuff. Probably the best department in the country.
I am really impressed with the quality of this documentary! Well done. Thank you for all you do to serve the people of Tulsa.
Absolutely killed it! This is super cool, love the cinematography and narrative!
Great video
Dudes moniker is literally Captain Morgan..
That station has a great officer in Capt Morgan.
This videos feels like a breath of fresh air, nice job man !
The cinematography here was absolutely incredible! Good work on this. Hope to see more stuff coming from you
Killed it! One of the best “shorter”documentary’s I’ve watched!
Definitely earned a subscription from me: I hope you continue videos like this. Professional quality. Well done.
This is amazing, especially for tulsa!
Wait how do you only have like 70ish subscribers. Amazing documentary cant wait to see more.
outstanding work
Jason!!! You got big bro!
Great video, learned a lot
Great video!
Well done Tulsa Fire Department!
Nice video..
dude whats in their water, every guy is build different there :D
❤❤❤
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Capt Morgan’s elbows look ashy
😂 Thanks for the feedback Eric! I shall start applying lotion to them.
Emergency traffic to assist a guy with his bedbugs. 🤦🏻♂️ 😆
Almost all calls are ran as emergent until someone on scene to determine, especially when the ems provider may be farther out because of another call not to mention the everyday traffic creating extended response time. Alot of the strictly fire service who donot provide ambulance response but provides ALS/BLS ems assist, get very little information tone the call and get the information after you already have someone enroute. You also cant count on the caller to give the dispatcher correct information
😂 We do NOT assist with bedbugs. We DO however need to be aware of them when entering a home to assist this elderly bariatric patient off the floor when he can’t help himself. The call was coded emergent because it was a fall with injury.
Only 3 to a rig?
Tulsa has 4-5 assigned to each rig, with a minimum daily staffing of 3-4 depending on the company. We have 45 fire companies across 31 stations and plenty of hands when we need them.
Standard
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