The staff of Bayambang’s Emergency Hotline (#4357) no doubt leads an interesting life. One might think watching live CCTV feeds everyday can feel like watching paint dry, but that is certainly far from reality. Out of curiosity, we’ve talked to a few key staff to get to know their work better, and we were rewarded with a wealth of startling discoveries.
Tolentino Temporal, a shift supervisor inside the container
van, says there are 16 lay rescuers and 13 drivers working in three shifts.
Four ambulances are on standby.
As expected, the most frequent calls, he reveals, are
complaints about power interruption. On rainy days, many people call for
updates on the weather. The most common emergency calls, however, are requests
for ambulance, usually to transfer a patient from one hospital to another. Next
are the frantic calls at night, requesting for help in cases of vehicular
accidents.
Reports of crime such as robbery and shooting incidents are
rare, but they do happen, Temporal says.
One such operator is Divino Martinez. He works during the
night shift, with two of them per shift plus a reliever. The shifting schedule
can be difficult for many, he says.
The operators receive the calls at the CCTV Command Center located
on the second floor of the Sangguniang Bayan Building and across the container
van. They are also the ones who monitor the live CCTV feeds.
Under the supervision of James Olegario, the LGU maintains a
total of 92 wireless CCTV cameras scattered across the town.
Do they ever get prank calls? Martinez says yes, from time
to time they do get prank calls, like in the case of someone claiming to have a
stab wound or getting raped but their claims turned out to be fake news.
Temporal explains that the operators on duty who are duped into
a prank often don’t follow the protocol, which is to verify the call by asking the
caller’s name, number, location, and brief description of the incident, and
calling them back.”
The most unusual call Martinez got so far is a call ordering
McDonald burgers. “Sometimes may batang tatawag, tapos puro sigaw lang.”
Another staff, ambulance driver Oliver Mabulay, recounts:
“Isa sa pinaka-weird na nasaksihan ko ay nung may nabanggang tricycle na
pagkalakas-lakas kaya tumilapon palabas yung pasahero, pero wala ni isang galos
o gasgas.”
Martinez has a long list of other memorable experiences.
“Minsan may nagsuntukan, at maya-maya nagbabatuhan na sila ng case na puno ng
Red Horse! Maraming instances na ang gulo ay nangyayari sa may videoke.”
When it comes to request for playback, usually it’s the
police who comes for help, he says.
Then he volunteers: “Araw-araw, may budol-budol incident sa tapat
ng CSI at CSFirst. Pero pag-ni-re-review namin, naka-alis na yung salarin, na
hindi taga-rito.”
Don’t they feel traumatized by the things they witness
first-hand and onscreen? “Sanayan lang,” Martinez shrugs.
But Mabulay says he knows of a number of colleagues giving
up because they could no longer take it. “I know someone who quit after
witnessing a bloody accident.”
So why is he still at it? “Palakasan na lang ng loob,” he
laughs.
Temporal confirms that there are staff who couldn’t take it,
and he had to startle them when they freeze on the job, telling them what steps
to take best to save the victim from perishing. “Later on,” he says, “we just
help each other with the debriefing process by recounting what happened.”
On October 18, 2017, Rowena P. Fernandez of Brgy. Bacnono
reported an incident of theft in front of the Bayambang Water District’s
office, after a tricycle went missing, and after requesting a playback of CCTV
footages, they were able to trace the perpetrator and put him behind bars. Are
there a lot of callers like Fernandez who get back to them to give thanks?
Martinez says yes, and it feels so good, “the thought na nakatulong ka.”
Mabulay agrees. “Masarap sa feeling.”
Oftentimes, Temporal adds, clients offer the ambulance
driver some tip as a way of giving thanks, but the policy of Mayor Cezar T.
Quiambao and their boss, the head of the Public Order and Safety Office, Mr. Vivencio
J. Ramos, is to decline. “We just routinely say, ‘Idagdag niyo na lang yan sa
bibilhing gamot o pangangailangan. Masaya po kaming nagbibigay ng aming
serbisyo sa taong bayan.’”
Mabulay says offers of tip are indeed tempting, “but we will
surely hear a word from Mr. Ramos if we do accept.”“But we’d appreciate it if
the beneficiary is considerate, like offering food or drinks if I am hungry and
thirsty while waiting because some of the requests involve traveling to
hospitals as far as Baguio or Manila.”
Do they ever get bored on the job? Temporal answers with an
emphatic “No, in fact, it’s thrilling. I was once asked to transfer to another
work station, but I respectfully said, ‘This is where the excitement is’.”
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