FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact: Courtney McCarron
202.277.4936 mccarronc@apco911.org
APCO RELEASES MOST EXTENSIVE STUDY EVER OF 9-1-1 PUBLIC
SAFETY COMMUNICATIONS CENTER STAFFING
August 24, 2005, Denver, CO - The
Association of Public-Safety Communications Officials (APCO) International
released yesterday the Project RETAINS
study on communications center staffing.
The APCO International Project RETAINS (Responsive Efforts To Address
Integral Needs In Staffing) tool kit was released at the APCO International
71st Annual Conference and Exposition in Denver, Colo.
The 9-1-1 call takers and law
enforcement, fire-rescue and emergency medical service (EMS) dispatchers and
their supervisors are the nation's first of the First Responders and among the
most unsung of the nation's unsung public safety heroes. Everyday across America, personnel in public
safety communications centers, staffed with as few as two and as many as more
then 100, stand ready to assist citizens in their time of emergency. More then
300,000 times a day, citizens call 9-1-1 and are dealt with by communications
center personnel. This profession has
historically been one that experiences high personnel turnover rates and
frequent vacancies.
"This often life-saving work
is wonderfully rewarding, but carries with it the awesome responsibility of
making split-second decisions in a time- critical, error-free environment,
while being empathic to citizens that are often in highly emotional, life
threatening and distraught situations," APCO International President Greg
Ballentine said.
The APCO International Project
RETAINS tool kit is the product of the most extensive, in-depth research ever
conducted of the issues impacting the recruitment, hiring, processing, training
and retention of personnel in
9-1-1 public safety
communications centers. The tools are
designed to assist communications center managers, human resource and
management and budget department personnel, police chiefs, sheriffs, fire
chiefs and elected officials, in addressing the challenges associated with
hiring and retaining qualified personnel for this vitally important position.
"On behalf of the APCO
Project RETAINS Team and the staff of the University of Denver/Denver Research
Institute, it has been our privilege and honor to address this issue,"
APCO International Project RETAINS Chair Steve Souder said. "We did so with a high sense of
commitment to our 9-1-1 public safety communications colleagues, the agencies
and jurisdictions in which they work, and the citizens they serve."