![]() Here are alternative ways to request non-emergency assistance during such times. Due to a severe staffing shortage at CSCC, at busy times we may not be able to answer. Rose said, “The quicker the deputies in the field can get the information, the better the outcome.”Īll patrol deputies with the Weber County Sheriff’s Office have access to Live 911.ĭepending on staffing in their area, they can adjust the size of the radius around them for which calls they hear and they can switch between calls as needed. The Community Safety and Communications Center (CSCC) Department answers both 9-1-1 calls and non-emergency calls to (206) 625-5011. Weber County deputies and dispatchers are hopeful more agencies in Utah will see how Live 911 is helping. ![]() Great news.’”Įven better news for the people who need that urgent help. “I just found out today that he lived,” Leon said. In the province of British Columbia, the 9-1-1 Police Dispatch Centres receive emergency and non-emergency calls for service from the public. One of them was an 11-year-old who later went to a hospital in critical condition. He said with the help of Live 911, he was able to respond quickly and resuscitate people with CPR in two different situations. “I went to an accident with injuries and I literally saw a lady take her last breath as I was the first responding officer there,” Leon said. Between dispatchers and deputies, responders in Weber County say it’s already making a difference. Time is the difference between locating an offender and not.” “We always say that time is heart muscle. ![]() Time in our industry is king,” Kevin Rose executive director of Weber Area Dispatch said. In that case, he was able to look at his computer screen and rush to the caller’s address. ![]()
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