The Unsung Heroes of Dispatching Published on Wed, May 19, 2010 by Robert Spinks, Sequim (WA) Police Chief http://www.sequimgazette.com/spinks Consolidation brings cost effectiveness Usually I write about crime issues; this week I want to highlight a group of unsung heroes who contribute daily to your safety and the effectiveness of police, fire and aid firstresponders. Telecommunicators! Sounds more like a new way to electronically commute to work versus being the men and women who man the phones, radios and computers in regional dispatch centers that are sprinkled throughout our state. Today the title of telecommunicator means much more than the old dispatcher title. These folks are armed with computers to enter emergency call data, have multiple radio channels to communicate across agency lines and are trained to provide emergency first aid instructions by phone. They also are the link between law enforcement and all of those computer files identifying wanted persons, driver's information and a host of court orders and safety information.
Just a few decades ago, police and sheriff's offices maintained their own individual and duplicated dispatch rooms. Then 9-1-1 replaced the thousands of individual phone numbers that went to tens of thousands of different agencies. A nationwide move in the 1980s began consolidating emergency dispatch services into more regional and professional operations. On the Olympic Peninsula, two major regional dispatch centers serve most police, fire and emergency aid agencies: • Peninsula Communications or "Pencom" is a division within the Port Angeles Police Department that serves 16 member agencies that comprise most of the local law enforcement and fire departments. • Jefferson County has Jefferson 9-1-1 Communications or "Jeffcom," which is a standalone intergovernmental agency located in the regional justice center in Port Hadlock.
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