If only 911 was that easy.
Let me tell you a little about me. I'm a 30 something small town girl who has found myself living in a crowded, big city. I've been working at 911 for a total of 7 years now, 5 years of that time at the current place. For blog purposes, I'll just call it 911. 911 is the busiest center in the state, and one of the busiest in the nation. We handle 911 services for several different police departments, of all sizes. We don't do fire or medical aid. All those calls are transferred. We'll talk more about that later.
I have lots of other interests outside of work, but I figure if you wanted to know about those, you'd be reading a different blog.
When people find out what I do for a living, the question is always "What is the worst call you ever took?" Really? I just met you and you already want the bloody, gory details? Well, I don't blame you. I guess the reason I love my job so much is because I kind of want all the details, too! I'm sort of nosy like that. The problem is, when I start telling people about the time I heard a guy get shot, or the suicidal who jumped off a bridge and was never found, people realize its not all that exciting. Really its actually kind of depressing. Or emotionally exhausting. Or incredibly frustrating. But mostly it is mundane and very boring.
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Let me just note that I do not work at the dispatch center featured in that video. But I've heard every kind of call featured there. You would think people would know better. That's why I'm writing this. Now you can't say no one ever told you.
1 comment:
I've heard that cheeseburger one before - funny, and yet .. like a train crash.
Everyone's parents taught their kids how to call the emergency number when we were young, but that was in the days when we'd have had to run down the road to the public phone. If I remember rightly, there was also a big notice in the phone box about how to call 999 (which is what it is in England). I'm pretty sure nuisance calls were very low in those days.
Maybe the problem is that people use their phones for just about everything these days ('hello, I'm on the train ... '), or maybe we've all become so pathetically reliant on what we call here 'the nanny state' nobody thinks properly for themselves.
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