The WNY Listening Post

Western New York’s Scanner-Fed Tabloid

Amherst · Dodge Road under the 990 overpass

A Medical Transport Van Full of Non-Verbal Autistic Passengers, Rear-Ended Under the 990

The morning's set piece: a hit-and-run under the Dodge Road overpass leaves an Aries Transportation van with five passengers who cannot self-report, and the shift spends the next forty minutes moving them, one by one, into a second van at 55 Dodge for a doctor to clear.

At 08:30, Amherst PD called out a hit-and-run to Amherst Fire Dispatch: “Hit and run, they're going to be on Dodge underneath the 990 overpass”. Getzville was toned out cold, and by 08:37 Amherst Fire Dispatch had the fuller picture on the air: “There's an Aries medical van there with five people involved in an accident. Not injured, needing evaluation”. There were no injuries reported, but the caller had asked for an ambulance “just to do an eval”.

The wrinkle that turned a routine cold response into a forty-minute morning was the population of the van. At 08:50 Amherst PD noted, in the flat way that dispatches note complications, that “they're all non-verbal autistic by-patient”, and by 09:00 the responding officer had explained the resulting logistics on the air: “The transport van is taking non-verbal autistic parties to various locations and because of that they have to be checked out by a doctor, not Twin City, so I'll just be here for a little bit”. At 09:10, on the Amherst-Clarence trunk, the dispatcher closed the incident on the ground: “We moved everything to 55 Dodge to train the other van … they're all patients who are cleared by Dr. Lynch, and we'll put Getzville in service”. Getzville went back in service.

Around the NeighborhoodThe Northtowns, call by call

Williamsville · 5854 Main Street

RESOLVED

"The Williamsville Powers": a Downtown Fire Line Turns Out to Be a Single Alarm Bell in an Apartment

Williamsville Fire Line rolls to 5854 Main between Old Place and Emerald; nothing showing; the lady across the hall had a key. No smoke, no fire, just an audible alarm nobody can silence.

At 07:20, Amherst Fire Dispatch put out a fire-line response to 5854 Main Street in Williamsville, between Old Place and Emerald — the dispatcher called it, on the air, “the Williamsville Powers, 5854 Main Street, between Old Place and Emerald Street”, and put the alarm at “an audible alarm coming from the apartment. No smoke or fire”. Firefighter Zemanek was on location within the minute, and the update was as bloodless as it gets on the fire trunk: “This is a call from Firefighter Zemanek. He's on location and there's nothing showing”.

The story got its clean resolution at 07:33: “As the lady across the hall had a key, he checked the environment, no smoke or fire”. The alarm remained audible in the apartment; the crew picked up in a minute. The intersection of Old Place and Main is a hundred and forty yards from SS Peter & Paul.

Amherst · 26 Quill Hollows

RESOLVED

Open Line Screaming from Quill Hollows: a 12-Year-Old, a Pair of Teenagers, and an Infant Upstairs

The 911 line came in open. In the background you could hear the kids. APD, then Fire, then cover.

At 12:51, Amherst PD put out a domestic to 26 Quill Hollows: “For domestic, 26 Quill Hollows, open line with screaming, 12 and the teenager”. The follow-up description came in ninety seconds later — “with a 16 and 17 year old out of control” — and a minute after that a responding officer noted the wrinkle that turns a shouting match into a stage-of-worry call: “Protecting Dad. There's also an infant inside that's upstairs”. Cover units were assigned and the call was closed on the trunk without an arrest.

Amherst · Hopkins from Maple

RESOLVED

Reckless Northbound on Hopkins — "a Blue SUV Driving Into Oncoming Traffic", Now Possibly a Black Chevy Equinox

Amherst PD ran a moving vehicle from Hopkins & Maple to the KeyBank at Hopkins & Flint in about four minutes.

At 13:40, Amherst PD put a reckless-driver call northbound on Hopkins from Maple — “Can you check Northbound Hopkins from Maple for that reckless op? It's a blue SUV driving into oncoming traffic”. Ninety seconds later the caller updated the description on the fly: “Affirmative. And they're now saying it's possibly a black Chevy … They gave us a plate of Michael-B-B-3390. Comes back on a Chevy Equinox”, with the plate coming back on “a Chevy Equinox”. By 13:41:48, the caller was watching the vehicle turn into a lot, and Amherst PD had it: “It looks like that vehicle is turning into a lot of the KeyBank Hopkins and Flint”.

Amherst · Parkside Houses

RESOLVED

"Scrubbing Bubbles": a Cleaning-Chemical Hazmat Scare at Parkside Houses, In and Out in Twenty-Four Minutes

A tenant between Sylvan Parkway and Robin Road mixed the wrong household bottles. Amherst Fire staged, sniffed, and stood down.

At 11:35, Amherst Fire Dispatch put out a cautious call to Parkside Houses, between Sylvan Parkway and Robin Road — “Parkside Houses, between Sylvan Parkway and Robin Road, mixture of cleaning chemicals leading to a possible hazmat situation”. By 11:59, before any hazmat protocol had actually landed on scene, the follow-up came in with a diagnosis that would fit on an aerosol can: “No hazmat, scrubbing bubbles, remaining unseen for a little bit longer. 11:59”. The alarm was cleared without incident.


Overheard: The WiresCops, cabbies, custodians, dispatchers — off-script

Cheektowaga · Dollar Tree · Surrey Plaza

The Dollar Tree Shoplifter in Full Camo, Walking Off Under the Weight of Three Tote Bags

Cheektowaga dispatchers do not always get to call the bag count on the air. They did today.

At 08:56, a Cheektowaga PD 1 dispatcher put out the description to a shoplifter-just-occurred at the Dollar Tree in the Surrey Plaza: “The shoplifting just occurred at Dollar Tree at the Surrey Plaza. A male was last seen walking … Black male in his 30s, 5'8", a black fisherman's hat, and we're in a full camo outfit”. And, seven seconds later, the detail that turned a routine shoplift into a portrait: “He's carrying three tote bags full of merch”. The dispatcher did not editorialize; the units acknowledged; the wire moved on.

Cheektowaga · welfare check

A Young Woman on a Cheektowaga Sidewalk, Walking Barefoot, Carrying Her Flip Flops

A polka-dot shirt, blue shorts, no answer to any question anyone asked.

At 11:42, Cheektowaga PD 1 held for a description on a welfare check: “20 to 30 years old. She's wearing a black and white polka dot shirt, blue shorts and carrying her flip flops. She's walking barefoot and looks lost”. There is a specific melancholy in a description that inventories the shoes but not the destination, and dispatch let the sentence land as it was written.

Amherst · Main and Youngs

"There's an Injured Bird on the Sidewalk, Main and Youngs"

The whole call, in one sentence, at ten twenty-three in the morning.

At 10:23, an Amherst PD unit reported in with the shortest possible dispatch a summer sidewalk can generate: “There's an injured bird on the sidewalk, Main and Youngs”. Dispatch, in this case, evidently did not have a car to spare, because the acknowledgement that followed was, verbatim on the trunk, one of the Whisper transcription's now-familiar accidental radio-DJ tics: “Thank you for watching!”.

Amherst · welfare check · Colleen from New York City

A Welfare Check on a 97-Year-Old, Called In by a Woman Named Colleen from Manhattan — "a Rustling, and Then Disconnected"

The kind of morning call that briefly reorganizes an Amherst PD shift around one house and one landline.

At 09:24, Amherst PD put out a welfare check: “It's a welfare check. Checking on a 97-year-old female. Colleen's calling from New York City”. The dispatcher's second beat gave the whole call the shape it kept: “Tried calling her about 10 minutes ago. Won't pick up. Heard a rustling noise and then disconnected and can't get her back on the line”. Twelve seconds and two decades of long-distance worry, put on the air.

Cheektowaga · 24 Bell Street

"They're on Genesee and Pine Ridge and They're Going to Come and Shoot the House Up"

A harassment call from Bell Street, in the words a 17-year-old daughter had already heard.

At 10:04, a Cheektowaga PD 1 dispatcher put out the follow-up to a welfare check with the address for its follow-through — “56 Welfare Check and head over to 24 Bell Street for harassment” — and then, without a pause, the substance of the harassment part: “There's people calling the complainant 17-year-old daughter saying they're on Genesee and Pine Ridge and they're going to come and shoot the house up”. Units acknowledged; the call was not a shots-fired; not, in the end, anything more than a threat. But the threat, on the air, was named.

Amherst · Wegmans on Sheridan

A White Chevy Impala, a Dog Inside It, in the Middle of the Wegmans Lot on Sheridan

Approximately the summer weather this brief is being written for.

At 09:27, Amherst PD ran a call to the Wegmans at 5275 Sheridan Drive: “55, Dog in a Car, Wegmans, 5275 Sheridan Drive … white Chevy Impala in the middle of the lot”. The air-quality alert for today put the afternoon high at 81. It is exactly the sort of morning that makes the ten-second call to the police non-optional.


Regional BlotterBeyond the Northtowns — WNY at large

Buffalo · 225 High Street · Auto Into Structure

RESOLVED

"An Auto Into a Structure… 1 in 1… Collapse Team Responding": BFD at 225 High Street

Downtown Buffalo Fire Ch. 1 filled the noon hour with the full callout of a car-into-a-building: three engines, a truck, one occupant reported trapped, and the structural-collapse team en route from Furman.

At 11:55, Buffalo Fire Ch. 1 Dispatch put a response out to 225 High Street, at the crossroads between Mulberry Street[*] and Locust Street[*]: “343 you are responding to High Street”. The line that hardened the call — the difference between an MVA into a wall and a collapse response — came within seconds: “You're responding, it's a crossroad 225 High, that's between Mulberry and Locust, it's a report of an auto into a structure, you have a 1 in 1 and the collapse team responding”. Engine 3 came in on Dispatch's second breath: “Dispatch, Engine 3 is in service, we'll respond to High”. Ladder 2 and a battalion were re-vectored from Furman Boulevard to make sure the building had the reach it needed.

Other Calls of Note

[08:51]Hamburg / Windom · 3071 Abbott Road Abbott, Scranton and Woodlawn were toned mutual aid to Windom for a possible structure fire at Buffalo's Best, 3071 Abbott Road; Orchard Park Control had the address as SS Peter & Paul School and paged Hillcrest for additional manpower. Handled without escalation.
[14:41]Cheektowaga · Dick Road at Harris Court Two-car injury MVA at Dick Road and Harris Court. Cheektowaga Fire and Cheektowaga PD both on scene by 14:42; EMS carried the patient(s) off the roadway; no fatal.
[09:58]Grand Island · 1886 Fidel Road Grand Island FD ran a hot EMS response to 1886 Fidel Road, at the southeast corner of Gerfoot Drive, for an 83-year-old female, not alert. Delta 1 priority.
[11:01]Ellicott Creek · 87 Grass Point Drive Ellicott Creek EMS to 87 Grass Point Drive, between Roundwood Court and South Ellicott Creek Road, for a 16-year-old male, allergic reaction to nuts; the caller stated she had administered Benadryl before the tone.
[07:36]Orchard Park · Ellicott Road Elementary Hillcrest and Windom toned to a commercial fire alarm at 5180 Ellicott Road, Ellicott Road Elementary School. An individual on site said the alarm was accidental — welding — but a crew ran the address anyway. Time of alert: 07:37.
[08:32]Getzville · 251 John James Audubon Parkway Getzville commercial fire-alarm activation at 251 John James Audubon Parkway, a rooftop-unit duct-detector activation; contractors were working on the rooftop unit and the alarm was cleared without extension.

Editor’s Note

Eight hours of daylight scanner traffic ran to 1,008 segments across 29 systems under an Air Quality Alert and a thin haze of Canadian smoke. The morning shift's set piece was a slow-motion incident on Dodge Road under the 990 overpass, where an Aries Transportation medical van full of non-verbal autistic passengers was rear-ended and had to be off-loaded car-by-car to a second van at 55 Dodge — every patient cleared by Dr. Lynch, no injuries, but a full morning of Amherst PD and North Bailey traffic on the trunk. Downtown Buffalo Fire pulled the day's biggest single response at 11:55, an auto into a structure at 225 High Street, one occupant trapped, with the collapse team rolling. The wire, meanwhile, delivered a Cheektowaga shoplifter carrying three tote bags of merch out of a Dollar Tree in full camo, a barefoot woman walking the sidewalk with her flip flops in her hand, and an anonymous "Williamsville Powers" fire alarm on Main Street that turned out to be nothing at all.

Daily Gem

No hazmat, scrubbing bubbles, remaining unseen for a little bit longer.”

— Amherst Fire Dispatch, 11:59 — Parkside Houses

By the Numbers

Segments
1,008
Active systems
29
Busiest hour
08:00-09:00 (Amherst-Clarence, ~135 segments — the Dodge Road medical-van MVA and morning fire-alarm activations)
Regional Breaking
0
Updates
0
By Agency (top 5)
BucketSegs
Police (Amherst PD, Cheektowaga PD 1, BPD, EC Sheriff)425
Fire / EMS dispatch (Amherst Fire, T-Hamburg, OPFD, BFD, Ellicott Creek)290
Municipal / county trunks (Municipalities, Erie County, Niagara)165
Hotel / shuttle / taxi (Embassy Control/Shuttle, BuffaloLimo)75
Schools / campus (W Seneca, Fisher Bus, FirstStudent, ECC)50
By Area (top 5)
BucketSegs
Williamsville & Amherst425
Cheektowaga / Lancaster / Depew140
Buffalo & Lackawanna130
Niagara County95
Other Erie / outer counties (Wyoming, Genesee, Orleans)65

Agency & area buckets are estimated from talkgroup counts in the export header; segment-by-segment reclassification would shift the numbers slightly. Roughly 155 additional segments belong to cross-region infrastructure trunks (Simulcast, Taxis, BNIA, CSX, FRS) not attributable to a single municipality.

[*] = a name the scanner audio left uncertain and could not be confirmed against an official source; treat as unverified. Routine street-name fixes against official municipal lists are applied silently.
The WNY Listening Post · Wednesday, July 15, 2026 · P.M. Edition · Vol. I, No. 67
Compiled from public radio scanner traffic via the WNY Listening Post automated pipeline. Transcriptions are AI-generated and may contain errors; verify names and details before action.
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