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FreewheelersEVS A comment on our website tonight "I am greatly amazed with these volunteers. I work in the laboratory and... http://t.co/OehlQLYk

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chris_a_nichol Would really like to be a rider for @FreewheelersEVS but not 25 yet :( what a great cause!

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UKBing @FreewheelersEVS Good luck! #HelpYourBritain

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FreewheelersEVS Please nominate us to appear on the Bing homepage as a featured charity - http://t.co/BtgjW6Bt

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TrueRiders
TrueRiders @FreewheelersEVS great service. All riders should volunteer to do this! One day it may be us needing blood!

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SERVKent for those that don't know, SERV is a charity staffed entirely by unpaid volunteers that deliver blood to local hospitals at night, for free.

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Reacting to Emergency Vehicles
Friday, 29 September 2006 00:00

Deciding on what to do when you hear an emergency vehicle approaching can be a dilemma. Do you stay where you are and potentially block the progress of an emergency vehicle? Or do you move into a position that may put you or other road users at risk?

The Institute of Advanced Motoring (IAM) regularly publishes driving tips. The latest tip is highly relevant to the work done by Freewheelers.

IAM Driving Tip 38: Emergency Vehicles offers advice on how to react when you see or hear an emergency vehicle approaching. As an organisation that uses emergency vehicles Freewheelers EVS is supporting the promotion of this important safety message. Please take the time to read the article, which is summarised below:

  • Don’t panic and just brake. It’s natural to want to react. But instinctively putting your brakes on immediately in front of an emergency vehicle doesn’t help: it slows the progress of the emergency vehicle and jeopardises other road users.
  • Think about where you are on the road. You should deal with the problem in the same way that you deal with any other potentially hazardous driving situation. What is the safest option available to you?
  • Don’t cross red traffic lights or speed to get out of the way. The emergency driver has training and legal exemptions that you don’t have. Bus lanes and box junctions can be problems too, but let them resolve the problem of breaking the rules – not you.
  • If you are moving it may well be that you can continue at a reasonable pace and the emergency vehicle can follow you out of a pocket of congestion (such as a blocked one way system). In that scenario, attempting to pull over too soon, or slow down, might just cause a needless obstruction and so hamper the progress of the emergency vehicle.
  • Indicate your intentions clearly Don’t pull in opposite other obstructions, such as centre bollards. If you are thinking about pulling over across an entrance to a school or factory, you may be unwittingly preventing the emergency vehicle reaching its destination. And do think about where you are asking the emergency driver to overtake you – on the brow of a hill or a blind bend can be placing him or her in a very difficult position.
Tags:safety
 

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