Technology to help 911 dispatchers communicate

Published: Monday, June 15, 2009 1:51 a.m. MDT
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 

MILLCREEK — Decade-old communications issues between the Salt Lake County Sheriff's Office and Valley Emergency Communications Center appear to finally be coming to a close.

In a news conference Wednesday, VECC leaders and the sheriff's office announced the launch of a partnership between the two dispatch centers through the use of technology that will enhance the ability of both centers to monitor their emergency operations.

"We believe we have achieved a goal that has been needed for over a decade," Salt Lake County Sheriff Jim Winder said.

Both VECC and the county believe that the new technology, which allows a bridge between the two communications centers, will have a significant positive impact on the residents of Salt Lake County.

Prior to the development of the system, Winder said, communication between the two centers, for all intents and purposes, was isolated to phone and radio communication only.

VECC is a central dispatch center for nine different police departments, from West Valley City to Draper. The sheriff's office provides separate dispatch services for unincorporated areas such as Magna and Millcreek and contracted cities such as Taylorsville, Holladay and Riverton.

Story continues below

In the past, when someone in an area serviced by the sheriff's office called 911 and the call went to VECC, dispatchers would have to transfer the call to the sheriff's office. Such a step slowed down the process and also carried the risk of the call being dropped completely.

With the new system, a call from one dispatch center can be immediately transferred to the other, along with the associated information regarding that call, which also eliminates the need for the caller to have to explain the emergency situation to two different people.

"Last night, we had 46 calls back and forth from VECC to the sheriff's office," Salt Lake County Mayor Peter Corroon said. "Forty-two of the calls were law-enforcement calls and four were medical, so we have proof that the system works, and we are thrilled to get these kinds of results."

Another improvement was the development of a program that allows the organizations to map emergency activities throughout the valley as they happen. On a digital map, dispatchers can monitor where their units are and where emergency calls are coming from.

The majority of the money that paid for the new systems came from a federal grant, but Winder thanked Corroon for his efforts to help fund other associated costs that occurred throughout the process.

E-MAIL: ethomas@desnews.com

Comments

You can be the first to comment on this story.

Image

Sheriff Jim Winder talks at the Salt Lake County Sheriff's Office dispatch center.

previousnext

Latest comments

We had a football party at my house with fans that wore blue and fans that...

I personally found this article funny. I enjoy following Jody's articles and...

Hall's pain reflects self-betrayal

I played football in college, and coached for 15 years. There is no need...

This whole thing is a joke. I don't like BYU or Max Hall, but he said what...

The 2009 BYU and Utah football teams are good teams for the Mountain West....

Utes won't respond to Hall

BOO HOO hahahaha

Good article!

BCS stable at top, Y. up to 14

Don't use stupid logic, Florida, Alabama and Texas all had close last second...

I think its stupid how people want to put so much hate towards Max Hall and...

Hall mouths off about hate of Utah

I am a life long BYU fan, and of course I was more than happy with a win on...

Advertisements