Tonawanda · Limehouse Sushi, 3030 Niagara Falls Blvd
RESOLVEDVape Pen vs. Sushi Restaurant; Fire Alarm Settles It
Ellicott Creek Engine 1 rolled on a smoke-detector activation in the Zone 7 bathroom and found exactly what dispatchers feared
Amherst Fire dispatched Ellicott Creek Engine 1 at 20:18 to a commercial fire alarm activation at Limehouse Sushi, 3030 Niagara Falls Boulevard, between East Robinson Road and Tonawanda Creek Road[*]. Inside, the trouble zone was Zone 7 — the bathroom — and the explanation was, well, the most modern of bathroom explanations.
“Vaping in the bathroom. Mark it avoidable” the dispatcher told the responding chief at 20:25, in a closing line that doubles as the day’s daily gem. The truck was placed back in service shortly after, but not before Amherst Fire opened a follow-up for ‘an obstruction to egress and obstruction by the alarm panel’ — the building’s actual fire risk apparently being less the vape pen than the boxes stacked in front of the panel.
East Amherst · Millersport & Dodge
RESOLVEDA Caller, a Car, and a Deer With an Unresolved Ending
Amherst PD checked the area for a deer that ‘ran off or survived’ — nobody seemed sure which
At 23:52 an Amherst PD unit gave dispatch the best address it could: “to Millersport at Beachwood, that should be the most accurate address I can get”. The caller was reporting a vehicle-versus-deer collision and could not say whether the deer had walked away from it. The officer added, plainly, that “she’s unsure if it ran off or survived this accident”, which is a sentence the briefing has never quite had to write before.
Twelve minutes later, with the area sweep producing nothing, the location was revised down the road — “this actually took place closer to Millersport and Dodge” — and a sixth-car officer keyed up the line of the night: ‘I’ll check the air for the deer.’ By 00:06 the scan list rolled forward and the deer joined the unindexed mysteries of the Millersport Highway corridor.
Amherst · A door, a note
RESOLVEDOfficer Reads The Sign So You Don’t Have To
A handwritten note found by a responding patrol; the store’s answer to a knock at the door
Sometimes the scanner gives you a whole little tableau in one transmission. At 17:37, an Amherst PD officer who’d been sent to check on the front of a closed shop keyed up to clarify the situation: “for the note on the door that says the cashier is in the bathroom”. The unit then rerouted to an injury accident on the 290, leaving the door — and the unattended register — to manage themselves.
BNIA · Shuttle row
RESOLVEDThe Shuttle Dispatcher Stages a Quiet Coup Against the Rideshare Crowd
‘I’m parked right here by the line.’ ‘You are at the no-parking that sign says.’
At 22:02 the BNIA shuttle dispatcher, having clearly had a Monday, walked his coworker through a small drama in real time. “I’m parked right here by the line” — the rideshare driver’s defense — was met with “you are at the no-parking that sign says” from the dispatcher, who explained that the rideshare cars were ‘blocking me from getting into my shuttle spots.’ The driver, per the dispatcher, replied “oh, I didn’t realize that” and moved along. Three flights from Boston were delayed, the booth was full, and the night’s patience had clearly thinned to a fine, audible film.
Eggertsville · Lennox Avenue
RESOLVEDA Grandson Calls Police on a Grandfather Who Lost His Father Yesterday
A welfare check that was less about danger than about grief
The kindest call of the window came in at 22:07: Amherst PD took a welfare check at 68 Lennox Avenue[*] [heard: Lenox], requested by a grandson named Robin Rhodes who had just been on the phone with his grandfather and “he didn’t seem right”. The dispatcher passed along the texture rather than just the address: “lost his father yesterday and just wants to make sure he’s okay”. The mother, dispatch noted, should already be on location.