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Utah County Looking to Unify 9-1-1 Response System

External News Source September 11, 2013 Industry

By Mike Gorrell, The Salt Lake Tribune

Salt Lake County is willing to put up the money to get valley emergency responders on the same 9-1-1 system, saving time and potentially lives.

The County Council unanimously backed Mayor Ben McAdams’s proposal Tuesday to take almost $1.4 million in newly recovered funds and to use them to create a joint, interactive 9-1-1 system used by all police, fire and emergency response agencies in the valley.

“I just want to make sure people get the help they need,” McAdams said after citing accounts of panicked 9-1-1 callers being transferred between different dispatch centers that cannot communicate with one another. That leaves callers bewildered or angry at having to repeat information about the crisis they’re experiencing or witnessing and delaying responses to emergency situations.

The proposal received support at Tuesday’s council session from Councilman Michael Jensen, the Unified Fire Authority chief, and Salt Lake County Sheriff Jim Winder. Later, Weber County Human Resources Director Brad Dee, who helped develop a unified 9-1-1 system in his jurisdiction, added that “emergencies know no boundaries.ccc When people call 9-1-1, they don’t care who responds. They just want them to respond.”

McAdams said he would leave the selection of a system to the experts, but it might make sense to go with the larger system.

For years, there have been two 9-1-1 dispatch systems in the Salt Lake Valley. Salt Lake City, the Unified Police Department and now Sandy use a computer software program called Versaterm. The Valley Emergency Communications Center (VECC), which provides dispatch for other valley cities’ emergency-response agencies, uses Spillman Technologies’ product. The Versaterm system handles about 70 percent of the million 9-1-1 calls made annually in the county, said emergency services director Jeff Graviet.

The inability of the systems to communicate has been a lingering concern, McAdams said, but no one has had the resources to get everybody on the same computer platform. And it would be unfair, he added, to charge only users of the abandoned software program for joining an integrated dispatch system when everyone in the county benefits from a single center.

His solution involves legislation passed last session that returned to the county about $1.75 million in revenue that unintentionally had gone to 103 redevelopment agencies after local governments, school districts and other taxing entities raised taxes. To get the bill passed, McAdams pledged to use the recovered money to promote regional collaboration that will make government more efficient.

The 9-1-1 system is a great place to start, said the mayor.

Winder and Jensen agreed.

The sheriff, who also runs the UPD, called the plan for a unified dispatch, records management and emergency-response plan a “pivotal moment in public safety. It comes down to Windows versus Apple,” he said using another computer simile. “They’re both good systems, but at a certain point, you have to get everyone onto one system. It’s pretty foundational.”

Added Jensen: “This is legitimately the first time I’ve seen or heard that the valley can get on the same [dispatch] page. This is huge for [the Unified Fire Authority]. Do not let this one go by the wayside. ccc Get this resolved once and for all and at some point in time, when people look back, they’ll say ‘they finally made the right decision.'”

Copyright © 2013 LexisNexis, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All Rights Reserved. 

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