Excerpts from nbcchicago.com:
Chicago’s Office of Emergency Management and Communications (OEMC) is investigating an incident involving a stroke victim’s call to 911.
If you need an address you can more than likely find it on your smartphone in the time it takes for you to read this paragraph. But NBC 5 has learned that emergency dispatchers in Chicago do not have ready access to smart phones or other basic map resources if someone calling from a cell phone is unable to provide a numerical address.
The OEMC is currently investigating an October 2nd incident involving a stroke victim’s calls to 911 in which two dispatchers told him they could not send an ambulance without an address, even though the man repeatedly provided the name of his hotel.
Duane Raible of Pennsylvania called 911 from his cell phone and told the dispatchers that his face was numb, he was dizzy and that he was at the Thompson Chicago Hotel. But the dispatchers insisted that he provide an address He could not reach the hotel room phone, but eventually used Siri on his smart phone to locate the address and relay it to a 911 dispatcher. It took nearly ten minutes from the time he first called 911 to the time an ambulance was sent.
Paramedics eventually arrived and took him to Northwestern Memorial Hospital, where he was diagnosed with a major stroke in his brain stem.
NBC 5 asked OEMC if dispatchers can use a cellphone to look up an address. OEMC’s answer: “No.”
NBC 5 also asked OEMC if it has access to internet-based map systems, a city directory, a hotel directory, or the Yellow pages. “We are looking at additional ways to provide additional sources in which to obtain locations from callers,” the agency said.
OEMC said it does have internet-accessible computers in their offices – just not on dispatchers’ desks.
A spokesperson said OEMC is committed to providing the best possible service to 911 callers and is working on ways in which to do so, including updating procedures, protocols and technology.
thanks Ron
#1 by Crabbymilton on November 29, 2019 - 2:12 AM
I’m sure it’s been thought of but how about this? Find a way to program your phone where you would enter the address of where you are located so that in the event of an emergency, it would transmit the exact location.
Now if you forget to arm it or correct it, that’s your fault.
#2 by Bmurphy on November 28, 2019 - 11:23 PM
As a risk management and loss control consultant for several major international hotel chains (along with almost 30 in the fire service) I can testify that this type of situation is a concern in the hotel industry. My advice has been for individual hotel management to work with their local E9-1-1 centers and try to ensure that it becomes policy that they simultaneously call back a hotel if they receive a cell call from a hotel, whether the caller verbally IDs their location or CAD determines it or both. The reasons to do this are so obvious that I won’t bother to comment on them. It’s admittedly hit and miss at this point in the US, but some hotels have good working relationships with their 9-1-1 centers. I’m guessing there will be some significant legal action regarding this. It’s tragic for the hotel guest that a very simple and common sense solution was apparently not taken by the ECC. As most hotel guests use their cell phones over house phones, this is an issue that needs to be addressed and quickly.
#3 by max O on November 28, 2019 - 2:37 AM
I know 911 can ping the tower the call hit off of but it would not be very useful in this case.
#4 by Clambino on November 27, 2019 - 10:46 PM
Affirmative action and corruption at work. Disgusting.
#5 by Tim on November 27, 2019 - 7:54 PM
The city that works. I hope he sues. The City needs to un-fu%$ itself and get a clue.
#6 by Mike L on November 27, 2019 - 5:52 PM
One Illinois Center and Nancy Clay all over again! You think after 32 years and technology being what it is they’d have this figured out. Not the call taker’s fault if they’re not given the right tools to do the job. The CAD should at least be set up for common places. Hope this gentleman makes a full recovery.
#7 by Marty Coyne on November 27, 2019 - 3:34 PM
Ridiculous and very scary that OEMC cannot locate a caller or dispatch help if given a clear landmark for a location. Many people calling on a cell will be able to give a landmark, but not an actual address (or intersection I presume would work too.)