Posts Tagged Red Center Emergency Dispatch

Wilmette Fire Department news

Excerpts from therecordnorthshore.org:

Wilmette officials took steps to alter the village’s emergency dispatch services and save taxpayers millions of dollars over the course of a decade, as trustees unanimously approved an intergovernmental agreement that will transition fire and police 911 dispatching services to The Glenview Public Safety Dispatch Center (GPSDC).

Police dispatching services will shift on Jan. 1 while fire services will do so in the first quarter of 2026 because the village is required to provide a one-year notice to the Regional Emergency Dispatch Center, which currently handles fire dispatching.  

Officials feel that the move will maintain or improve public safety services in Wilmette because GPSDC provides both police and fire dispatching.  

Existing Wilmette telecommunicators reportedly will have jobs in the GPSDC if they choose. 

The village’s work around a potential new police station spurred a review of its dispatching operations as officials are making decisions on which services could be included and which will not, presenting an opportune time to consider regionalization of dispatch. 

The shift should result in a substantial long-term savings to the Village of Wilmette and taxpayers, saving approximately $6.6 million over a 10-year period in dispatching-related costs. The switch also creates a reduction in the size and cost of the potential new police station project by approximately 1,700 square feet and up to $1.1 million. 

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Wheeling Fire Department news

#chicagoareafire.com; #WheelingFD; #NorthwestCentralDispatch; #REDCenter;

click to download

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RED Center history

Another vintage/historic submission from Drew Smith

Early graphic for RED Center dispatch.

Early graphic for RED Center dispatch.

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Another department looks into consolidating emergency dispatch – Lemont FPD (update)

A followup article on the Lemont FIre Protection’s decision to go forward with outsourcing emergency dispatch services:

Lemont’s emergency fire and medical dispatchers last week received notice that their services might be contracted out to an outside provider. The district’s board of trustees Thursday decided to move forward with outsourcing. Lemont’s emergency fire and medical calls will soon be routed through [the] Orland Central call center, as the Fire Protection District Board of Trustees Thursday unanimously approved outsourcing the services.

The positions of the district’s 9 dispatchers—3 full-time and 6 part-time—will be eliminated when the change goes into effect, tentatively by April 1.
“We didn’t take this lightly,” said Fire Chief George Rimbo during the meeting. “We truly believe we’re giving you the recommendation that’s going to set us on the path of the right thing to do.”

The shift is to compensate for funds lacking in the district, following a court decision dictating that the fire district could no longer monitor fire alarms in businesses. Funds allocated for that service previously covered the cost of keeping dispatch in-house, Rimbo said.  Without the funds, it’s not feasible for the district to cover the cost of dispatch operating from within the district, Rimbo said.

At a cost of roughly $116 per call with in-house services, contracting the work through Orland Central could reduce the cost to $39 per call—an estimated annual savings of roughly $235,000, said Rimbo.

Current dispatchers route vehicles based on proximity to one of the district’s four fire stations. Advanced real-time tracking technology used by Orland Central locates ambulances and fire trucks, and reroutes the nearest vehicle to an emergency, Rimbo said.  High-end technology—such as a $1 million computer-aided dispatch (CAD) system—offered by Orland Central is a significant improvement over Lemont’s current $60,000 hardware, Rimbo said.

Orland Central is one of two fire/EMS/rescue dispatch centers in the state, and serves as back-up to the primary statewide MABAS Communication System operated out of Red Center in Northbrook. In 2012, the center’s 11 full-time and 8 part-time staff fielded 19,000 calls across the Orland Fire Protection District and the two additional contracted communities of Oak Forest and Calumet City.  Lemont dispatchers field approximately 3,000 calls per year.

thanks Dan

Our previous post is HERE.

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Another department looks into consolidating emergency dispatch – Lemont FPD

A recent article outlines a possible move to close the emergency dispatch center maintained by the Lemont Fire Protection District.

Lemont’s emergency fire and medical dispatchers received notice that their services might be contracted out to an outside provider. The Lemont Fire Protection District Board of Trustees will consider the move Dec. 19. Lemont emergency fire and medical calls could soon be routed through a center in Orland Park, as the Lemont Fire Protection District mulls outsourcing the service to compensate for lacking funds.

Fire dispatch employees last week received email notification of the potential change, which would eliminate their positions and shift the work to an Orland facility.

“We lost a decent amount of cash-flow to support our dispatchers,” said Fire Chief George Rimbo, of why they began researching the outsourcing. “We lost the revenue.”

Rimbo examined three options—Orland Central Dispatch, keeping the services in-house, and a third confidential party. At a cost of roughly $116 per call with in-house services, contracting the work through Orland Central could reduce the cost to $39 per call—an estimated annual savings of roughly $233,000, said Rimbo.

If the board approves contracting through the Orland Call Center, Rimbo expects to see call response time improve. Current dispatchers route vehicles based on proximity to one of the district’s four fire stations. Advanced real-time tracking technology used by Orland Central locates ambulances and fire trucks, and reroutes the nearest vehicle to an emergency, Rimbo said.

Orland Central is one of two fire/EMS/rescue dispatch centers in the state, and serves as back-up to the primary statewide MABAS Communication System operated out of Red Center in Northbrook. In 2012, the center’s 11 full-time and 8 part-time staff fielded 19,000 calls across the Orland Fire Protection District and the two additional contracted communities of Oak Forest and Calumet City.

Currently, nine dispatchers—3 full-time and 6 part-time—operate out of Fire Station 1 in Lemont. The district fields roughly 3,000 calls per year

The board of commissioners will consider the move Thursday, Dec. 19 at 6 p.m., at Fire Station 1, 15900 New Ave., in Lemont.

thanks Dan

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