Are police fast enough? on 911 emergency callsby NancyAre police fast enough? on 911 emergency calls Date: Jun 24, 2006 11:42 AM PUBLICATION: WINNIPEG FREE PRESS DATE: 2006.06.24 PAGE: A6 BYLINE: Bruce Owen SECTION: City WORD COUNT: 1533 ------------------------------------------------------------------------ -------- Are police fast enough? Crunching the numbers on 911 emergency calls ------------------------------------------------------------------------ -------- LAST Saturday, Pete Debungee encountered unspeakable cruelty on the streets of Winnipeg. The 45-year-old grandfather was "curb-stomped," his head forced on a concrete street curb and trampled, after he tried to stop some men from stealing his beer. He died in hospital Tuesday. Those close to the scene outside the Maryland Hotel say a hotel employee phoned 911 twice in the 45 minutes before Debungee was attacked, complaining about the disruptive behaviour of the gang outside the hotel, but officers arrived only when it was too late. Debungee's family and others say if police had responded to the earlier calls, he'd still be alive. Police say they did their best based on the information they had. When they got the third 911 call -- the one that told them a man was being attacked -- officers arrived within a minute. Should police have responded sooner? It's a question that haunts Debungee's family, the officers involved and the 911 operators who assign priorities to each call they take. Since 2004, Winnipeg police have used a new computer-aided dispatch system to assign priorities to each call and then dispatch officers. Priority 0 is the most grievous, a life-or-death situation, and Priority 9 is the least serious, like graffiti on a garage. Police respond much faster to Priorities 0, 1 and 2, and in some cases can take several days to respond to the lower priority calls. The new system was designed to help 911 operators better manage an ever-increasing number of calls. In 2005, police communication staff handled about 600,000 calls and dispatched officers to 170,000 incidents, about 6,000 more than the year before, according to police statistics. Some officers blame the new dispatch system, and the new call-priority grading system, for increasing response times to some important calls. Winnipeg Police Association spokesman Loren Schinkel said in some instances, the system focuses too much on managing calls, and not enough on dispatching officers. "I know that response times have gone up dramatically," Schinkel said, blaming a shortage of officers and the sheer volume of calls. "You can't be everything for everyone at all times," he said. Some Winnipeggers have complained publicly about police showing up too late, or not at all, to arrest car thieves, home invaders, shoplifters or drunk drivers. On June 4, residents at an Osborne Village-area apartment building caught a man apparently breaking into vehicles. They had to hold him for about an hour before police showed up. According to Schinkel, it can take police four to five days to investigate some crimes, like break-ins. Police chief Jack Ewatski acknowledged there have been some growing pains with the new system, even two years later. But he said the police service is continually training 911 communication staff to make sure they get the right information from callers to help them priorize each call. "It's only as good as the information you get," he said. There were about 100 calls in the 911 queue last month when John Vandusen was attacked and stabbed in his North End home. It was a Saturday night, May 21. Despite two frantic calls to 911 -- one by his girlfriend and another by a neighbour -- police took about two hours to arrive. "The initial call was of disorderly youths," police Sgt. Kelly Dennison explained at the time. "It was assigned as a (low) priority five." That 911 call came in at 6:30 p.m.. The second 911 call came in at 8:58 p.m. when the confrontation escalated and Vandusen was attacked in his house. Dennison said the call was then upped to a priority three, but 911 staff increased it to a priority two at 9:02 p.m. Eight minutes later, a patrol car was dispatched, and arrived at Vandusen's house at 9:17 p.m. Total time elapsed? 19 minutes. By then Vandusen, 49, had been beaten and stabbed. His attackers only fled when his girlfriend released the couple's two Rottweilers from their kennel. "How we respond to serious crimes is very good," Ewatski said in a recent interview on the 911 system. "The numbers tell me that information is coming in very quickly and being dispatched quickly." Here are those numbers: The average response time to high-priority emergencies in 2005 was seven minutes and eight seconds. (Response time is the time between when a 911 call is received and when the first officer arrives on the scene.) That's more than two minutes longer than it was in 2004. Some people consider response times a top measure of police performance; others say it only really matters to someone who's called 911. "Everybody thinks what happens to them is of primal importance," says University of Winnipeg criminology professor Michael Weinrath. "What people don't realize is how few police cars there are in their neighbourhood. There are only so many police around." Police response times are generally getting longer as officer workload increases and the number of calls for service goes up, not only in Winnipeg, but for police in every major city in North America. At 8:30 p.m. last Saturday, the night Debungee was attacked, for example, there were 46 other calls requesting police in Winnipeg's downtown alone. Ewatski said average police response times from 1999 to 2003 (see chart) were compiled under the old record-keeping system. The numbers for 2004 and last year are from the new computer system. From 1999 to 2003, average response times rose to a high of almost 10 minutes in 2002 and then fell to about six minutes the following year. More importantly, Ewatski said, the amount of time serious calls stay in the queue -- the time between when a call is taken to when it is dispatched -- was cut in half in 2003 from 2002, when it was more than four minutes. The average queue time in 2005 was 1.97 minutes. "Most high-priority calls do not sit in the queue long," Ewatski said. In Winnipeg, police now treat all domestic calls as high priority, a decision some say has officers run off their feet. The emphasis on domestic calls flowed from the murders of sisters Doreen Leclair and Corrine McKeown. They were stabbed to death Feb. 16, 2000, by McKeown's boyfriend, Bill Dunlop, who is now serving a life sentence. The women made five calls to police in the eight hours before they died, but cars were only sent after the first and last calls. What also influences police times is Winnipeg's use of two-man patrol units to handle emergency calls instead of dispatching single officers, critics say. (Winnipeg has a minimum of 27 two-man patrol cars on the road at all times). The Frontier Centre For Public Safety has said front-line patrol coverage can be doubled by using two one-officer units instead of one two-officer unit. Beat sizes can be cut in half, leading to faster response times. Calgary, for example, uses both two-officer and single-officer units from 6 p.m. to 6 a.m., with single officers responding to minor calls. Calgary police are currently reviewing that policy in the wake of an inquiry into the October 2003 fatal police shooting of Sudanese immigrant Deng Fermino Kuol. Const. Ira Macumber shot a drunken Kuol twice in his neck after Kuol attacked him with a knife. Calgary police are now looking at how they can better dispatch two-officer units to situations where there is a potential for violence. In Winnipeg, two-man units are entrenched in the union contract, and said to be the best way to ensure officer safety. Schinkel said response times could be improved with the hiring of more officers. The current complement of officers is 1,254. In 1998, the year Ewatski became chief, there were 1,206 officers. Statistics Canada, in a report last December, said Winnipeg had more police officers per capita than many Canadian cities, including Toronto. As to recent complaints police have taken too long to respond to complaints, Ewatski said he believes "those are few and far between." What matters, he said, is how the public views overall how police are doing their job. The service is in the middle of a telephone opinion survey, done by eNRG Research. It was completed June 16. Its findings will be released to the public at a later date. How quickly do police show up in other cities? Average police response times (minutes) to high- priority emergency calls (most recent available): Winnipeg (2005) 7.08 Calgary (2004) 5.09 Montreal (2004) 6.03 Ottawa (2005) 8.9 Toronto (2003) 8.0 Hamilton (2004) 9.11 Target is under 10.0 Response times depend on traffic conditions, weather conditions, time of day, location of call and information provided to 911 dispatcher. Putting a priority on calls Winnipeg police have a nine-priority 911 call system. Here are the top four: l Priority 0: Specifically identified situations where a known crisis exists that threatens the life of an individual. l Priority 1: Situations where an imminent threat to personal safety exists or the loss of or damage to property exists. Conditions at the scene of the call are unstable. l Priority 2: Situations where no immediate threat of harm exists at the scene of the call. A timely response is very desirable but not mandatory. l Priority 3: Situations involving stable conditions at the scene of a call, which may be handled at the convenience of available units as competing demands permit for the dispatcher. For more information, go to www.winnipeg.ca/police/ and follow the link Reporting Emergencies on the right-side column. What are police doing to speed up response times? l Computer-aided dispatch: Started in 2004 along with new call priority management system. Allows 911 call-takers to quickly assign a priority to an emergency call and dispatch a patrol car. l False alarms: More than a year ago, police changed their alarm policy. Alarm companies now have to verify an alarm before police are dispatched. The number of alarm calls to which police are dispatched has now fallen about 80 per cent. l 311: The city is also looking at a 311 city information line to cut down the number of nuisance calls to the 911 operators, calls like, "What day is my garbage day?" Operators get about 100 bogus calls a day. Goto Forum Home |
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