911 People would ask you "What is your situation?" and "Where are you?" then the will say the who ever you need will be there in how ever many minuet's.
There are no patron saints of 911 dispatchers but St. Michael the Archangel is the patron saint of emergency medical technicians and other emergency workers. He would probably be willing to accept prayers from dispatchers as well.
First, it is not always a police officer answering 911 calls. Often times they are civilians trained specifically for the job. Either way, they will typically ask four main things: Where is the emergency? What is the emergency? When did it happen? Who is involved and who are you? Depending on the situation, further questions will be asked to obtain more information.
No, police dispatchers do not have the same authority as police officers. Dispatchers are responsible for receiving and relaying information, coordinating resources, and assisting officers in the field, but they do not have the power to make arrests or enforce laws like police officers do.
Emergency management jobs cover a wide variety of different tasks. Some involve responding to natural disasters or managing 911 calls, but not all do.
Dispatchers and 911 call takers work around the clock answering calls for service and dispatching personnel to scenes using high-tech communications equipment. In Florida they are not deputized law enforcement officers.
911
Yes I'm currently a driver there and deal with our dispatchers daily. Every company that has drivers has dispatchers.
American Train Dispatchers Association was created in 1917.
Dispatchers are represented by subway/surface dispatchers association, transit supervisors association, twu local 100 dispatchers association
The questions ask answers
911/3 percent is.
Plato, a Greek philosopher, asked questions on a wide range of topics including ethics, politics, epistemology, and metaphysics. Some of his famous questions include "What is justice?", "What is the nature of reality?", and "How can we achieve true knowledge?"