1,744,591 research outputs found
Kansas NG9-1-1 Regular Council meeting minutes. Kansas NG9-1-1 Coordinating Council meeting. Kansas NG911 Coordinating Council meeting. Kansas Next Generation 911 Coordinating Council meeting. 911 Coordinating Council notes from ... meeting. Kansas 911 Coordinating Council minutes from ... meeting. 911 Coordinating Council minutes. Executive summary of the ... 911 Coordinating Council meeting. Kansas NG9-1-1 Special Session Council meeting minutes. 911 Coordinating Council teleconference meeting minutes (March 13, 2013). 911 Coordinating Council special meeting (July 23, 2013 ; July 24, 2015). Kansas 911 Coordinating Council briefing (March 30, 2020).
Meeting minutes and handouts for meetings held throughout each year.The Kansas 911 Coordinating Council was created by the Kansas 911 Act (K.S.A 12-5362 et seq) and is tasked with monitoring the delivery of 911 services, developing strategies for future enhancements to the 911 system
Tinnitus 911 Supplement - Read Benefits, Ingredients, and Price Before Buying
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Nerve Control 911 - A Nerve Repair Solution Released
Nerve Control 911 is PhytAge Labs progressed nerve quieting supplement that use top notch characteristic fixings to improve muscles and reflexes, while infiltrating harmed, debilitated nerves and fixing them at the center. Andrew Price's audit discovered Nerve Control 911 utilizes a blend of natural mixtures in the recipe which encourages buyers to improve muscle work by focusing on the main driver of neuropathy; fiery nerve harming. This nerve quieting equation is acquiring a foothold inside the more extensive dietary enhancement local area, so customers should place in the work to choose if Nerve Control 911 is appropriate for them
Calendar Year 2007 Grant Application
"Application deadline: received by 5:00 p.m. September 1, 2006"--CoverKansas Wireless Enhanced 911 Advisory Board Wireless Enhanced 911 Grant Application -- Guidelines -- Kansas Wireless Enhanced 911 Grant Guidelines -- Criteria & Eligibility -- Limitations Of Fund Use -- Eligible Costs -- Grant Application Deadline -- Grant Project Period -- Reporting Requirements -- Equipment -- Grant Award Decisions -- Instructions -- Attention -- General Instructions -- Attachments -- General Information Form Wireless Enhanced 911 Grant Calendar Year 2007 -- Summary Of Contents -- PSAP Information Form Wireless Enhanced 911 Grant Calendar Year 2007 -- Budget Summary Form -- Budget Narrative
The 911 call processing system: A review of the literature as it relates to policing
Police spend an inordinate amount of time responding to 911 calls for service. While most of these calls are unrelated to crimes in progress, police often respond with the tool that is most familiar and expedient to them: enforcement. This exhausts police resources and exposes countless people to avoidable criminal justice system contacts.
There is a pressing need for data-informed strategies to identify 911 calls that present a true public safety emergency and require an immediate police response, while responding to other calls in ways that do not tax limited policing resources and promote better outcomes for the people involved and the communities where they reside. This report summarizes the current state of 911 research, discusses the problems and potential of current 911 data collection practices, and recommends steps that law enforcement and emergency communications professionals can take to conserve resources and help ensure that the right response reaches the right caller at the right time
911 Calls
Two studies in which 911 calls reporting homicides will be coded by trained judges using the 86 item 911 Q-sort. Study 1 is designed to determine which of the 86 911 Q-sort items related to guilt or innocence of caller and create a "profile" of q-sort items related to guilt. Study 2 will use a different sample of 911 calls to determine if this "profile" of q-sort items of guilt can predict guilt or innocence of callers
911 Calls
Two studies in which 911 calls reporting homicides will be coded by trained judges using the 86 item 911 Q-sort. Study 1 is designed to determine which of the 86 911 Q-sort items related to guilt or innocence of caller and create a "profile" of q-sort items related to guilt. Study 2 will use a different sample of 911 calls to determine if this "profile" of q-sort items of guilt can predict guilt or innocence of callers
Prevalence of PTSD symptoms in Canadian 911 operators
By answering the 911 telephone line, ascertaining what type of help is needed (police, ambulance, or fire) and how fast they are to respond, the 911 communications operator is the “first” of first responders. If 911 operators were not able to extract vital information from panic stricken people and make split second decisions to send the required help, members of the public would not receive the assistance they need and many could perish. Yet, 911 operators are forgotten when it comes to prevention, education, and treatment for stress-related injuries resulting from their work. This study examines whether 911 operators suffer from post-traumatic stress symptoms than could amount to a diagnosis of PTSD, which of these symptoms are most prevalent, and what other factors such as workplace stressors may contribute to their stress levels. This study is the first one in Canada focusing specifically on post-traumatic stress disorder within the profession of 911 communications operators
"911, Is This an Emergency?": How 911 Call-Takers Extract, Interpret, and Classify Caller Information
Policing in America is in crisis. Much of the nation is outraged by the level and distribution of encounters and arrests, infringements on civil liberties, and excessive uses of force by the police. Prior scholarship typically has attributed these problems to features of officer-initiated policing—specifically police officers’ decisions in who to stop and when to arrest.
By contrast, reactive or call-driven policing has not received comparable scholarly attention. Yet, in many places roughly half of all police-work involves responding to the public’s calls-for-service. In these cases, a series of interactions take place between 911 callers, 911 call-takers, and dispatchers before the police arrive at the scene, all of which can produce information that shapes police responses.
This dissertation is squarely focused on the role of 911 in American policing. It aims to answer the question of how 911 call-takers mediate caller demands and impact policing in the field. To answer this central research question, the author worked for two years as a 911 call-taker in Southeast Michigan, which allowed her to analyze the kinds of problems callers report, the decisions that call-takers must make, the challenges and dilemmas that they face, and the ways in which training and organizational norms shape the call-taking process.
Using a mix of quantitative, qualitative, and conversation analytic methods, this dissertation reveals that the process through which private citizens’ requests become police responses is complex and presents unique challenges to policing. The chapters aim to show how the contemporary 911 system has come to offer the public wide latitude over the scope of police work. By dissecting the day-to-day duties of 911 call-takers, the chapters shine a light on two critical call-taking functions. First, the author reveals an overlooked call-taker function—risk appraisal. Through unpacking precisely how call-takers appraise risk, namely through extraction, interpretation, and classification of caller information, this dissertation provides a framework to evaluate call-taker actions. Second, the author complicates the previously documented gatekeeping function by showing how organizational rules and norms can constrain the ability of 911 call-takers to limit the public’s heavy reliance on the system. Taken together, the chapters find that call-takers exercise discretion when performing these critical functions and their actions impact police responses.
This dissertation puts forth recommendations aimed at encouraging police agencies to reconceptualize the call-taking function in an effort to enable call-takers to more intelligently deploy discretion. Recommendations include developing protocols and criteria that empower call-takers to prevent inappropriate requests from receiving police services, training call-takers to assess risk in more sophisticated ways, distributing call-taker best practices to peers, and using technology to assist call-takers in preserving caller uncertainty. The author hopes that these findings and recommendations will help improve police encounters with the public and spur readers to strongly consider 911’s role in policing in the future.PhDPublic Policy & SociologyUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/163046/1/jgillool_1.pd
Immigrants - 911 is for You Too
Mini-essay on the author\u27s experience as an African immigrant in the U.S., afraid to call 911 in an emergency. Briefly reflects on his fears, and how he overcame them
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