by AllThingsECC.com | Nov 16, 2021 | Comm Center News
A $16-million disaster-resistant building is being proposed to house and keep intact Greater Victoria’s public-safety infrastructure. The facility would help first-responders to continue operating with minimal interruption during a major emergency.
The board behind the region’s emergency communications system is asking its shareholders to support and help fund the plan.
The Capital Region Emergency Service Telecommunications (CREST) system’s board has already approved entering into an agreement to buy a $1.8-million plot of land in Langford and is seeking approval from its 20 shareholders, which include the region’s municipalities, emergency services and the province to go ahead with design and building…
by AllThingsECC.com | Nov 16, 2021 | Comm Center News
Murfreesboro Emergency Communications Center (ECC) has cross-trained and certified 9-1-1 operators in Emergency Medical Dispatch (EMD). Dispatchers can now provide lifesaving and safety instructions to callers and patients before medical help arrives on the scene, including Telecommunicator CPR (T-CPR).
The 9-1-1 medical call for help is answered and processed within Murfreesboro’s ECC. Dispatchers share the information with Rutherford County Emergency Medical Services dispatchers and Murfreesboro Fire Rescue medical responders through an enhanced computer-aided dispatch interface between the city and county. The process saves valued time during life-threatening emergencies…
by AllThingsECC.com | Nov 16, 2021 | Comm Center News
TEHAMA COUNTY, Calif. – The Tehama County Sheriff’s Office dispatch center can once again handle calls 24 hours seven days a week, but it doesn’t come without a workaround.
As of Nov. 12, the department only has six dispatchers, according to Zachary Backus, the president of the Tehama Deputy Sheriff’s Association.
Four of those six are fully trained including a Deputy Coroner who is temporarily filling in. The other two dispatchers are still being trained.
Dispatchers there are expected to work 12-hour shifts each. And that’s because they handle a variety of calls including fire, medical, and crime…
by AllThingsECC.com | Nov 15, 2021 | Comm Center News
After more than two-and-a-half years of planning, the Owensboro-Daviess County 911 dispatch center will switch to a modern computer-aided dispatch and records management system this week, when the system goes online Tuesday.
The new computer-aided dispatch, or CAD, system replaces technology that has been in use for more than 20 years. The upgraded system will provide new services to officers and first responders, while making it easier for officers to file reports.
But will the new system result in better outcomes for officers, responders and for people calling for assistance and help? Officials at agencies that rely on computer-aided dispatch say the system will make law enforcement officers safer, while providing information so responders can better assist people in an emergency…
by AllThingsECC.com | Nov 15, 2021 | Comm Center News
Central Dispatch is experiencing an increase in resignations due to schedule changes brought on by continuous understaffing issues.
Director of Grant County Central Dispatch Kevin Hicks has received numerous resignation letters from dispatch workers over the past few months, which has been reported to the commissioners during multiple meetings.
The increase in resignations caused the department to alter the schedule for current full-time employees. The new schedule consists of 12-hour shifts that have sparked some full-time employees to recently switch to part-time work or resign…