OAKLAND (CBS SF) — Amid calls for police budget cuts, Oakland police plan to hire momre dispatchers, improve their dispatch center's technology and seek more funding for the center, all to improve public safety.
The
planned changes follow a grand jury's findings that police dispatchers are
overworked and the center is short-staffed and underfunded.
Police
will seek more resources for the center from the City Council in the next
biennial budget, and the department is working now to improve the center's
technology, said police spokesman Paul Chambers.
Thousands
of 911 callers each year abandon their attempts to reach a dispatcher, and even
more wait more than two minutes for help, while the state standard is for
callers to reach a dispatcher in 15 seconds, according to the report.
“We
certainly agree with and appreciate the report as we agree that the Oakland
Police Department communications center, our 911 dispatch center, has been
understaffed, under-resourced and underfunded for quite a while,”said interim
police Chief Susan Manheimer.
Chambers
said the phone system has been upgraded and a new feature coming within months
will reroute dropped calls back into the queue, so callers do not have to
redial. He said hiring for more dispatchers is expected to start in August or
early September.
“We
are going fix and address the issues in our communication dispatch center,”
Manheimer said Tuesday.
Since
the phone system upgrade, more calls are being answered in 15 seconds compared
with 2019, Chambers said, but he did not say by how much.
A
new system to track emergency calls and to send information to responding
police officers will be running next year, according to Chambers.
“911
is our lifeline, our safety net for you the community as well as for our
officers responding,” Manheimer said.
From
CBS San Francisco
July 24, 2020
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