March 20, 2013
New 911 system accelerates response times
Lawrence Pierce
Russell Emerick (left), deputy director of technology for the Kanawha County Metro 911 system and 911 director, and Kanawha County Sheriff Johnny Rutherford (right), demonstrate 911's new computerized dispatch system. The system integrates and streamlines lots of different functions into one fast and simple package.
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Emerick said the maps show all kinds of local street names, landmarks, bridges, roads, waterways and rail lines. "It shows you the fire hydrants," he said, noting that dispatchers can use the maps to tell firefighters where the nearest source of water is to fight a fire.

Missy Bennett, a 911 dispatcher for the past five years, said the maps and aerial photographs can be used to help give emergency responders directions to the scene of an emergency or to help callers figure out exactly where they are.

Rutherford said the new system is already paying off.

Last week, dispatchers got a frantic call from a woman near Mink Shoals. Rutherford said the woman was screaming that her boyfriend had tried to tie her up with zip ties and was beating her, but was unable to tell dispatchers her location.

Bennett said the new 911 system was able to "ping" off of the woman's cellphone until dispatchers had an approximate idea of where she was. She said a cellphone only gives dispatchers a latitude and longitude reading, but by pinging the phone several times, a more precise location can usually be established.

"She was hiding from the guy, so we were able to go to her instead of the scene because we had the cellphone coordinates," Rutherford said. Deputies soon located Adam Lee Arnold, 36, of Charleston, and charged him with domestic assault and domestic battery.

Bennett said the new system is better than the old 911 system. What used to require switching screens, tabbing through extraneous data boxes and several steps can now be done almost instantly or through one or two keystrokes.

"It's just a lot faster than it was," she said. "Now everything is in one place."

Reach Rusty Marks at rustyma...@wvgazette.com or 304-348-1215.

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