- Reaction score
- 1,512
- Points
- 1,260
Bass ackwards said:Back when police comm centres were still staffed by coppers, there used to be the three "INs" of winding up in communications:
IN sh!t
INcapacitated
INcompetent
I think the police, and EMS, changed Communications from an assignment for Police Officers and Paramedics to a Direct Entry position for civilians hired off the street to save money. There was an unsuccessful Human Rights complaint against the City of Vancouver regarding this:
"the mostly female police dispatchers, who are civilians, are paid 40 percent less than the mostly male contingent of fire department dispatchers, who are firefighters.":
http://www.straight.com/article/dispatchers-lose-case?#
Vancouver EMS dispatchers were not included because they are provincial, not city, employees.
This is a story ( with some interesting comments! ) regarding TFS dispatch. It's in the same HQ as T-EMS, but they are two separate worlds ( and floors ) apart:
http://www.thestar.com/article/646628
Not sure why the reporter called it "a tired industrial complex". It's been a beautiful place since 1981. TFS joined us in 1998.
As I said, they treated me with nothing but kindness when I was in there. Even though I was not qualified to answer phones or dispatch, they made sure that I was involved in the process. They made me feel useful at a time when I needed a job to do, rather than sit at home.
That was back in the paper and pencil days, before computers! The telephone call receivers would time stamp the work ticket on a machine, then put it on a high speed conveyor belt with tracks to the specific radio desks up front. Each desk had it's own ticket rack and coloured status buttons. I can't remember what the colours meant, but they all meant something. I have sincere admiration for the work that they do. Then and now. They have a "third ear". One ear for the phone, one for the radio and the third for the room. Their eyes are in constant motion.
Since then, things have changed. 9-1-1 and cell phones have skyrocketed call volumes. There are now multiple callers for the same incident, but they each have to be processed. There's also Advanced Medical Priority Dispatch System (AMPDS). Pre-arrival instructions could include how to do CPR, the Heimlich Manoeuvre or how to deliver a baby. Dispatchers also have to work with a translations service, Poison Control, HAZMAT, TTC, swimming pools etc.
Used to be the about the only question was, "Where do you need it?" and not much else. Most calls were either "medical emergency" or "Unknown problem - see the wo/man".
P.S. I know you will be offline for a while Bass. Thanks for your posts, and have a great time!