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Sunday, April 21, 2019

Ledyard Police Chief supports the 911 SAVES Act, a pending federal bill that would classify dispatchers as first responders


Ledyard — Fires. Car crashes. Assaults. Suicides.

In each situation that a firefighter or police officer handles, a dispatcher is on the other end, calming the caller, gathering information and orchestrating the response.

“We’re often hearing people at their worst,” said Ruby York, a dispatcher in Ledyard for 21 years. “We’re the first person they talk to — and sometimes the last.”

Yet the federal Office of Management and Budget considers the position “clerical,” like a secretary, rather than “protective,” like an officer.

Police Chief John Rich said this past week that he supports the 911 SAVES Act, a pending federal bill that would change that designation, which he considers a slap in the face.

“I see them as first responders, most definitely,” he said. “The nature of their job is much more than clerical."

Rich said seven full-time and eight part-time dispatchers handle about 2,000 calls a month for American Ambulance, Ledyard police, Ledyard and Gales Ferry firefighters, and Preston and Poquetanuck fire and emergency medical services.

From their seats within the Colonel Ledyard Highway headquarters, the dispatchers let first responders know where construction sites are, or if they’ve been to a home multiple times in a short span. They ask callers if weapons are involved or teach people how to render first aid while services are en route. They relay information to responders and enter details into various databases.

“It’s a super technical job,” said Rich, who has been in law enforcement for 32 years. “They’re in there trying to juggle the whole situation."

“You realize very quickly the critical role of the dispatcher in the entirety of the picture on any call,” he added.

‘You don’t have time to decompress’

York, 51, said one of her craziest calls happened when she answered the phone and learned the caller was trapped in the trunk of her ex-husband’s car.

The car left York’s coverage area, so she transferred the call to another dispatch center, which promptly hung up.

“I made contact with that area and said, ‘Hey, you just hung up on a caller in the trunk of a car,’” York said, shaking her head. “They eventually found her — she was taped up and everything."

Michael Gilman, a part-time dispatcher who has done the work for 22 years, said one of his more memorable calls was from an elderly woman who had seen a pretty bird outside her home. “She was so concerned it was someone’s pet,” the 45-year-old said, smiling.

Taking advantage of a relatively quiet day, the pair kept exchanging silly stories.

“People call 911 because they know it’s the only number a human will answer all the time,” York said.

But the conversation in the dimly lit center soon took a darker turn.

York remembered learning from a caller that a driver had hit and killed a young girl. The girl's brother survived because he was on a snow bank, but he saw the whole thing.

Just a few weeks earlier, another pair of children had died in a crash, she said.

Gilman said he has listened to several people die.

“It's hard when they’re begging you for help and you keep telling them, ‘Help is on the way,’” he said. “Then you hear them fade away to the point that they’re not breathing.”

Asked how he copes, Gilman said, “I go on vacation.”

“I think (dispatchers) get forgotten in the aspect of being a witness to a traumatic event without being there,” Rich said. “But you’re a witness because it’s happening on the other end of the phone.”

York thinks the federal bill could make it easier for dispatchers to be diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder, and may make legislators more likely to include dispatchers in future bills regarding mental health.

“We grew up in the era of, 'Suck it up and move on,'” York said. “So this legislation is huge for us.”

“Some days you just never get to come down from a call,” she said. “You don’t have time to decompress, you just compartmentalize. Some people move on, but it’s a cumulative stress.”

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