911 Dispatcher Falls Asleep During Call

-Cp

Senior Member
Sep 23, 2004
2,911
362
48
Earth
MILLERSVILLE, Md. -- A 911 operator in Anne Arundel County, Md., faces accusations of sleeping on the job -- but she's not the first.

This time, a supervisor caught the dozing dispatcher last Sunday before it could affect any emergency calls, WBAL-TV in Baltimore reported.

A caller to 911 heard, for almost two minutes, snoring while calling in an emergency last August.

Since then, authorities have increased lighting at the dispatch center and added additional police officers to work the midnight shift.

Anne Arundel County Police Capt. Kim Bowman said the department has educated employees and supervisors to the difficulties of staying awake during the overnight shift. Bowman said that shift remains the most vulnerable to this problem.

"People want to be asleep at 3 a.m. So, we have to recognize that that's an issue; nonetheless, it's intolerable for that to occur, and we've tried to sensitize our employees to these issues," Bowman said.

Officials said the dispatcher's falling asleep never impacted a caller, and new safeguards seemed to have worked.


Read the rest:
http://www.local6.com/news/4329110/detail.html
 
-Cp said:
MILLERSVILLE, Md. -- A 911 operator in Anne Arundel County, Md., faces accusations of sleeping on the job -- but she's not the first.

This time, a supervisor caught the dozing dispatcher last Sunday before it could affect any emergency calls, WBAL-TV in Baltimore reported.

A caller to 911 heard, for almost two minutes, snoring while calling in an emergency last August.

Since then, authorities have increased lighting at the dispatch center and added additional police officers to work the midnight shift.

Anne Arundel County Police Capt. Kim Bowman said the department has educated employees and supervisors to the difficulties of staying awake during the overnight shift. Bowman said that shift remains the most vulnerable to this problem.

"People want to be asleep at 3 a.m. So, we have to recognize that that's an issue; nonetheless, it's intolerable for that to occur, and we've tried to sensitize our employees to these issues," Bowman said.

Officials said the dispatcher's falling asleep never impacted a caller, and new safeguards seemed to have worked.


Read the rest:
http://www.local6.com/news/4329110/detail.html


out source to another time zone where the sun is up......why is this shit so hard
 

Forum List

Back
Top