Chichester Observer

Sussex Police to top table for answering 999 calls

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Sussex Police looks set to top the table for answering 999 calls within ten seconds for the third month in a row.

The news was shared during a performanc­e and accountabi­lity meeting on February 16, which was chaired by Police & Crime Commission­er Katy Bourne.

Temporary Assistant Chief Constable Howard Hodges said: “Our performanc­e has improved dramatical­ly and we’re incredibly proud that we’re in the position we are.”

In December, 93.9 per cent of the 20,148 999 calls received by the force were answered inside ten seconds. In January, it rose to 98 per cent.

While a full break-down of the figures was not yet available for January, December’s showed that 1,091 calls (5.1 per cent) took between ten and 60 seconds to answer and 228 calls (1.1 per cent) took more than 60 seconds. The meeting was told that February’s figures looked to be on course to top the table as well.

T/ACC Hodges said: “What we can’t do is be complacent around that – we have to keep the pressure on.”

He cited several reasons fortherece­ntimprovem­entin the number of calls answered so quickly – with technology being top of the list. He said a new telephony platform had ‘transforme­d’ how staff dealt with calls, making it simple to jump between 999 and 101 calls without having to log in and out of the relevant systems. Less time was spent on admin, planning and rostering thanks to the workforce management system, and the control centre had been assigned a dedicated Chief Inspector to keep things running. T/ACC Hodges added: “The performanc­e isn’t just about the technology. The staff in the room – and it is a pressure cooker environmen­t to work in the control room – have absolutely embraced the need to improve the performanc­e and they’ve embraced the technology as well.”

Non-emergency 101 calls have been a thorn in the side for a number of years, with the average answering time 20 minutes in 2017/18. In 2018/19 more than half of the people who made a 101 call hung up because they got no response – a situation T/ACC Hodges called unacceptab­le. This January, the average answering time was one minute 28 seconds, with around 22,500 calls being made.

 ?? ?? Sussex Police has improved in the number of 999 calls answered quickly
Sussex Police has improved in the number of 999 calls answered quickly

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