Apple introduced its latest iPhones and Watch 8 series with the ability to send an automatic call to emergency services when the device detects a sudden stop, usually as a result of a car accident.

The feature is now being rolled back as one US ski town has seen 71 crash reports, The Colorado Sun reported. According to the Summit County 911 Center, none of those automated calls were emergencies — skiers just stopped suddenly on the slopes without needing medical attention.

The “crash detection” and “fall detection” features on the iPhone 14 series will automatically call 911. The emergency center will then call the phone back, and if the caller doesn’t pick up, theoretically they were involved in an accident, ie. an emergency vehicle must be dispatched.

According to Trina Dummer, interim director of Summit County 911, those calls involve “a huge amount of resources, from dispatchers to deputies to ski patrols,” but none of them were true emergencies. Dispatchers send these automated calls to snowy hills and slopes, meaning they are diverted from a real emergency that could save someone’s life.

Dispatchers from Grand County, the Vail Police Department and Pitkin County receive about 20 robocalls each day. They try to call each of them back, but often the skiers have their phones deep in the pockets of their layered clothing and can’t answer, sending rescuers to the iPhone’s last known location. Paramedics rarely reject these calls for help because they cannot distinguish what is urgent.

Grand County Sheriff Brett Schroetlin said Apple responded to dispatch supervisors and revealed it was aware of the conflict between the skiers and the accident detection technology, and that a team in Cupertino was working to fix it.