Santa Fe New Mexican

Emergency 911 systems struggle to keep up with technology

Patchwork systems mean degree of help depends on where you are

- By Lisa Marie Pane

HROSWELL, Ga. igh school students hiding from the gunman in Parkland, Fla., were forced to whisper in calls to 911 for fear of tipping off their location. Others texted friends and family who then relayed informatio­n to emergency dispatcher­s.

A few months later, a woman in Michigan was able to send off short text messages to 911 dispatcher­s as her homicidal husband held their daughter hostage. She was able to convey enough informatio­n to help officers get to the scene and formulate a plan to stop the man without the family being harmed.

The two cases show how that in this era of active shooters, police shootings and global terrorism, a patchwork of technology around the country can make the experience of calling 911 vastly different depending on where you live. More cities have begun to accept text messages recently, but the system that Americans rely on during their most vulnerable moments still hinges largely on landline telephones, exposing a weak link that jeopardize­s the ability of law enforcemen­t to respond in an emergency.

“Most of the technology that’s in the nation’s 911 centers today is technology of last century. It’s voice-centric communicat­ions,” said Brian Fontes, chief executive officer of the National Emergency Number Associatio­n.

Nearly 80 percent of the nation’s 911 calls come from cellphones. Yet the dispatcher­s on the other end are hampered by outdated technology that in most cases doesn’t allow them to accept text messages, receive a live-streaming video or sometimes even easily detect where the caller is. It’s a striking contrast at a time when text messaging is ubiquitous, video chats with friends and family on the other side of the world are common, and Uber and Lyft drivers can pinpoint precise locations of riders.

The issue received new attention this week after the results of a police investigat­ion in Cincinnati revealed numerous breakdowns in the response to a teenager who got trapped under the backseat of his minivan and died despite voice-dialing 911.

Experts worry that the nation isn’t focused enough on improving the system and it is causing delays in getting emergency responders to the scene as fast as possible.

One obstacle is that there’s no federal mandate or standards for call centers, with each one managed by state and local government­s. That means there’s a wide range of standards, equipment and training. And a recent report by the Federal Communicat­ions Commission found that a surcharge paid by phone customers that is supposed to be directed to 911 is diverted by some states to other needs, to the tune of about $128 million. Rep. Anna Eshoo, a Democrat who represents California’s Silicon Valley, has been on a mission to modernize call centers since seeing one up close during an earthquake when she was on the San Mateo County Board of Supervisor­s. Her worries only grew after the 9/11 attacks. She’s visited all the call centers in her district and, she said, “the smaller ones, especially rural areas, you walk in and it looks like 1952 because they’re not funded the way they should be. They need to be upgraded.”

In December, she submitted legislatio­n that would direct federal funds to state and local government­s to allow them to upgrade their systems to “Next Generation 911.”

It was Feb. 16, 1968, when the very first 911 call was placed — a test call made by a state senator in Alabama — and the system was born. It is now embedded in Americans at a young age to dial those three digits in an emergency. An estimated 270 million such calls are made each year in the United States.

Until recent years, dispatch centers might receive a handful of calls at most during an emergency. A witness to a car accident, for example, would have to get to a landline to alert authoritie­s. And each landline phone is tied to a specific address, giving 911 operators instant access to their location.

But now in emergencie­s — whether it’s a routine traffic accident or a fast-moving crisis like a mass shooting — 911 operators get inundated with dozens of calls. If the person is using a cellphone to call from inside a building, the location may not be immediatel­y known.

The biggest step many local government­s have made with 911 is accepting text messages, including cities such as Phoenix, but the vast majority still do not.

Melissa Alterio, the director of the 911 communicat­ions center in Roswell, Ga., oversees a dispatch center that accepts text messages.

Roswell, a suburb about 20 miles north of Atlanta, sees between 400 and 600 calls every day. It got its first text 911 message shortly after beginning to accept them this spring, someone worried about a possibly suicidal friend.

At some point, dispatcher­s might be able to view video streaming, just like anyone checking out Facebook. Alterio worries about when that happens, knowing the emotional toll it could have on dispatcher­s who already struggle with what they hear on the other end of the line.

“We have to do something to prepare them for what they will see,” she said. “God forbid a situation like a Parkland happens. It’s tough enough that they hear it. Seeing it as it happens is just another stressor.”

 ?? LISA MARIE PANE/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A dispatcher works in March at a desk station with a variety of screens used by those who take 911 emergency calls in Roswell, Ga. The Roswell call center is one of the few in the United States that accepts text messages.
LISA MARIE PANE/ASSOCIATED PRESS A dispatcher works in March at a desk station with a variety of screens used by those who take 911 emergency calls in Roswell, Ga. The Roswell call center is one of the few in the United States that accepts text messages.

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