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Butler County, Ohio: Improved 9-1-1
call response via GeoLynx Desktop
The Butler County Sheriffs Office has been using VisionAIRs Computer-Aided
Dispatch (VisionCAD) for nearly nine years. Recently the Department
implemented GeoComm's dispatch mapping software (GeoLynx Desktop).
VisionCAD and GeoLynx Desktop are truly integrated applications with a
bi-directional data exchange. Telecommunicators enter calls in VisionCAD,
and the calls automatically populate on the map. Conversely,
telecommunicators have the ability to start calls from the map, which
automatically sends the data to VisionCAD. With numerous benefits from the
tight integration between VisionCAD and GeoLynx 9-1-1, Butler County
Sheriffs Office has improved their response to 9-1-1 calls.
Active call in GeoLynx Desktop
In January 2009, about a month after going live with GeoLynx Desktop, a call
was received regarding a car that had driven into a swimming pool.
Apparently, the vehicle's operator lost control of the vehicle while traveling on a
roadway behind the residence. The vehicle went through a fence, crossed the
yard, and came to rest with the car teetering half on the tarp covered pool and
half on the yard.
One of the first calls to come in was from a motorist who saw the vehicle leave
the roadway. The call information was entered in VisionCAD and the callers
location immediately plotted in GeoLynx Desktop and zoomed to the location.
Since the caller was on a roadway behind the residence, they could not tell
the dispatcher what the address was or even the street name of the house
with the pool. All the caller could say was the road they were on and that a
car went through a fence and into a pool. Using GeoLynx Desktop, the
dispatcher had a general idea of where the incident occurred based on the
cellular callers GPS location.
Soon after, as it usually happens, additional calls came in regarding the same
incident, including a couple of calls from neighbors whose locations also
displayed on the map. More calls came in and all the icons started appearing
around the scene of the incident, both from the roadway and from the houses
next to the location of the car in the pool. It became apparent where the
incident was on the map simply by the fact that it was practically surrounded
by icons. If that was not helpful enough, by clicking on the address in the
center of the markers and opening Pictometry®, an aerial photograph opened
up and the pool and road behind the house that the car was traveling on were
visible.
In my excitement, I explained to someone else in the room that this was an
image of the pool where the car was. Everyone was so caught up in the
moment that someone actually asked, Wheres the car? I laughed and said,
That kind of technology is still a bit in the future. But it made me think of just
how close we really have come to such ability with the GeoComm mapping
software! Sgt. Mark Ketteler, Butler County Sheriffs Office, stated.
Needless to say, dispatchers appreciate the added value GeoLynx Desktop
delivers to their CAD system as well as the integration between GeoLynx
Desktop and VisionCAD.
Other Dispatch GIS Benefits Realized
Besides responding to this and other incidents with greater geographic
reference using GeoLynx Desktop and VisionCAD, Butler County dispatchers
are seeing other benefits including the ability to:
• Immediately locate cellular 9-1-1 caller locations on the map
• Mark road closures and controlled burn sites
• Geographically confirm repeat calls on an incident Increase familiarity with
the county and county roadways
• Have better directions provided to emergency responders
About Butler County, Ohio
The Butler County Sheriffs Office is one of 88 Sheriffs Offices in Ohio. Butler
County, located in the southwest corner of the state, has a population of
around 360,000 and is only possibly known nationally for what was once its
best kept secret for decades. Fernald, Ohio, was home of the Feed Materials
Production Center where most of the uranium cores were fabricated for use in
the U.S. Nuclear Weapons program from the 1950s through the 1980s.
Butler County dispatch center averages 125 9-1-1 calls a day and handled
over 72,000 calls for service in 2008.
Butler County dispatches for 3 township police agencies, 13 fire departments,
and 10 Life Squads
.
"GeoLynx Desktop was very flexible and easily customized to meet our needs. GeoComm's
technical support is always prompt and professional; their personnel are great to work with."
- Richard Harris - Operations Manager, Lancaster County-Wide Communications,
Pennsylvania
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