Jan Myers |
A Couple of Questions:
Why is the phrase, ‘I’m just a dispatcher” still used? When will dispatchers finally accept that
they are first responders?
Over 15 years ago I was tasked to write an article; an extremely
unfamiliar and uncomfortable task required to complete a year long process of
becoming a master instructor for California Peace Officer Standards and
Training (POST). This was not a task I
took lightly for two reasons: Being
published scared the living crap out of me, and, I was JUST a dispatcher…How could someone like me write an article?
Fast forward to 2015. President & Founder Sean Riley from Safe Call Now® asked me to write a segment for his blog,
specifically for dispatchers. I pondered
on this for a bit. I’m no longer fearful
of writing, thanks to the 3 plus years on non-stop writing required of a mental
health counseling graduate degree program.
I no longer work a radio or telephone system, thanks to a posttraumatic
stress disorder diagnosis in 2001 – not that I could not continue the work, I
chose not to. On the other hand, I’ve
been blessed to continue to work with 9-1-1 dispatchers, emergency call takers,
telecommunicators, etc., by way of teaching at academies in California and
Oregon, and participating with pro-dispatch programs such as Safe Call Now®, the 9-1-1 Wellness Foundation, and The First Responder Support Network (FRSN). Reflecting on these experiences, I continued
to ponder … What concerns have dispatchers continued to express in academies
and or advanced courses over the years?
What are they fearful of? Do they
still feel unappreciated?
Considering what I have heard and observed over the years, I
realize, for the most part, not much has changed in the past 15 years. Yeah,
yeah, technology has changed exponentially, radio consoles that once held 1-2
monitors are now overwhelmed with 3 times as many; cell phone calls into Comm
Centers is now the norm, and NextGen 9-1-1 is just around the corner. The
one thing that has not changed in the world of 9-1-1 dispatching is the human aspect. No matter how technological things get, human
beings with real emotions continue to listen to the worst day of others, to
their officers screaming for back up, lose contact with a firefighter who has
fallen thru a collapsed roof, and work within administrative systems that do
not respect the job of a dispatcher nor have any concept of what it really
takes to be a dispatcher.
Just as it was 15 years ago, I hear from dispatchers who
continue to be “forgotten” when debriefings are held. I still hear the phrase, “I’m just a
dispatcher” or “We’re not considered first responders.” I hear unbelievable stories of communications
training officers (CTOs) treating their recruits horribly. I watch dispatchers give 120% to their job,
unsure of why their personal lives are no longer manageable. Here in lies the problem – with additional
technological advances in the world of dispatch, such as texting to 9-1-1 or
livestreaming videos in which dispatchers will be ‘on scene’ witnesses to the
unthinkable AND that human aspect, NOW IS THE TIME to believe in yourselves –
stop waiting for others to do so! Demand
to be invited to debriefings, retire the phrase ‘just a dispatcher’, come to the reality that
you are indeed first responders, quit treating your replacements horribly, and
do as much for yourself as you do for others! There is one thing I have
consistently seen dispatchers do across the country; they rise above. Raise the bar on dispatchers, and they’ll
meet it. Now is the time to raise the
bar so as to prepare for what the future holds.
Now is the time to access the resources available to dispatchers,
such as SCN, 9-1-1 Wellness Foundation, FRSN, peer support teams, employee
assistance programs (EAP), and mental health counselors who understand public
safety work (yeah, they exist). Now is the time to give a copy of Lilly and
Pierce’s 2012 research article on the duty-related trauma exposure of 9-1-1 dispatchers
to your communications supervisor, manager, chief or sheriff. Now is the time to utilize the 9-1-1 acute
and traumatic chronic stress management standards set forth in 2013 by the National
Emergency Number Association (NENA). Unaware of this study or this
standard? Google both – you’ll find
them. Use them both not as an excuse for
bad behavior or poor performance, but as an explanation to the necessity of
most agencies to stop sweeping the reality of duty-related stress under the
proverbial rug. Now, as many others have
done for the past 15 years, is the time for all dispatchers to support each
other, share resources, and change the archaic mindsets that still exist. There has been no better time than now to
take advantage of what is around you, personally and professionally. Now is the time to proudly state that you ARE
a dispatcher. Now is the time to be recognized
and acknowledged as first responders, because you are. Now is the time to really prepare for the
unthinkable things you will continue to hear, and soon enough see, because you
will always be an emotional being expected to be technologically savvy. Now is the time to believe in who you are and
what you do. You do a job most cannot do
even without the added technology. Now is the time to believe in you, not just
the job you do.
WELL SAID and ABSOLUTELY TRUE!!
ReplyDeleteJan, you knocked this out of the park!!! Thank you...
ReplyDeleteI am not a first responder, but I know a few and I can see how stressful thier job is, including the dispatcher. I think you have done a great job in showing that. THANKS to all of you
ReplyDelete