Firefighter Close Calls

Home of the Secret List

TUSCON 911 CENTER KEPT MARANA DISPATCHER ON HOLD DURING CARDIAC CALLS

 Barry Furey    February 7, 2021    No Comments

Apolice department trying to summon help for a woman in cardiac arrest called twice and spent more than four minutes on hold with Tucson’s 911 center before someone answered the call, a report from the center’s interim 911 director said.

The lapse in service during the medical call from Marana occurred two weeks before the director of Tucson’s 911 suddenly quit her $175,000 position after 14 months on the job, public records show.

Besides serving Tucson, the city’s 911 center dispatches fire and medical calls on a contract basis for Northwest Fire Department, which services such calls in Marana.

The situation illustrates the potential peril of “critically low staffing levels” at the Tucson center, where an outside consultant found a multitude of problems including poor morale, infighting, cramped quarters, high turnover and lower wages than similar jobs pay elsewhere.

Those problems are the main reason 22 staffers were on duty instead of 32 on the day a Marana 911 dispatcher couldn’t get through, a recent report to Tucson’s city manager said.

The lapse in service occurred Dec. 28. On Jan. 15, Jamie O’Leary, the then-director of Tucson 911, resigned, citing “compelling personal family needs.”

The first public account of the 911 lapse is contained in a Feb. 1 report to Tucson’s city manager from Tucson Police Department Deputy Chief Chad Kasmar, who has temporarily replaced O’Leary as head of the city’s Public Safety Communications Department, which operates 911.

Marana has its own 911 dispatch system for police calls but normally transfers fire and medical calls to Tucson’s center for dispatch to Northwest Fire.

On the day of the incident, Marana 911 received a cardiac arrest call at about 3:45 p.m. — about the same time Tucson’s short-staffed 911 center was seeing a steep surge in calls, the report said.

The Tucson center received 140 calls in 30 minutes, about 32% higher than normal for the period, the report said.

The Marana dispatcher trying to transfer the call spent three minutes on hold, hung up, called again and waited another minute and 15 seconds before someone in Tucson picked up the call, Kasmar said in an interview.

The Marana Police Department, which has officers trained in CPR who carry portable defibrillators, sent them to aid the cardiac arrest patient until Northwest Fire paramedics arrived.

“It is my understanding that the person in cardiac arrest ultimately did not make it,” Kasmar said.

The situation has not shaken Northwest Fire Department’s faith in the Tucson 911 system, which has been dispatching calls for Northwest for about 20 years, said Brian Keeley, the department’s division chief of administrative services.

“Unfortunately, nothing is perfect. There are failures that occur in the system but we don’t see them on a regular or repetitive basis,” Keeley said in an interview.

“We have confidence that (Kasmar) is looking into this and any other issues,” he said.

Tucson’s City Council has created a task force to monitor 911 problems and oversee improvements. Kasmar’s report on the state of the department is due to be discussed Feb. 9 at the next council meeting.
https://tucson.com/news/local/tucson-911-center-kept-marana-dispatcher-on-hold-during-cardiac-arrest-call/article_27cf63fb-26c1-55fb-ae06-260202a8e69f.html

 Fire Communications

Also check the most current issue of THE SECRET
LIST
(Click Here)

Sign Up for Secret List

For Email Newsletters you can trust.

Please Visit
Our Sponsor

GordonGraham.com


YOU NEED THIS BOOK!
(Trust Us)

400+ PAGES.
90+ CONTRIBUTORS!
100% of the royalties from the sales of "PASS IT ON" will be donated to the National Fallen Firefighters Foundation and the Chief Ray Downey Scholarship Fund.
CLICK ABOVE TO ORDER YOUR COPIES TODAY!


 

Pass It On: The Second Alarm

BillyG-book-170



Posters

Click to Print

  • Home
  • About Us
  • Apparatus
    • Crashes
    • Struck By
  • Close Calls
  • Contact Us
  • Drills
  • FIRE & EMS CIVIL DISORDER
  • EMS Close Calls
  • Fire Communications
  • Firefighter Cancer
  • Firefighter History
  • Firefighter Staffing
  • Gallery
  • LODD Calendar
  • Modern Fire Behavior
  • NIOSH Lessons Learned
  • NIOSH LODD Reports
  • Pass It On
  • Behavior Health
    • Behavior Health Resources
    • Behavior Health Information
  • Safety and Survival
  • Secret List
  • SOG’s
Submit Your
CLOSE CALLS /
NEAR MISS

 

LODD STATS

YearTotals
202063
201957
201885
201793
201689
201586
201494
2013101
201283
201181
201087
200993
2008118
2007118
Tweets by @alertpage

Search Site

In Memory Of

fdnyClick this patch

Contact Info

Email BillyG
info@firefighterclosecalls.com

Email Weekly Drill
Suggestions to

Drills@firefighterclosecalls.com

helmet

ragusa

Click Here for The 9/11 Widows’ and Victims’ Families Association

ssc

Click Here: Skyscraper Safety Campaign


Copyright © 2003-2021

Copyright Disclaimer: This non-commercial, non-profit and free use website is for the exclusive purpose of firefighter safety, health and survival. All photographs in these posts are either submitted or from aggregate Google and are used in the postings for the purposes of education, satire, and parody, criticism, news reporting, research, and scholarship consistent with 17 USC §107 and never due to intentional or malicious misuse of a copyright.