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Apache County Sheriff’s Office Communications Center
is the major and in some cases the only source of communication for emergency services in Southern
Apache County. Located at the central offices in the Apache County Sheriff’s
Office in St. Johns, the communications center is manned around the clock by
at least two of the ten full time communications
specialists.
The
Communication Center services multiple departments, which include St. Johns
Police Department and fire and ambulance, Eagar Police Department and fire,
Springerville Police Department and fire and the White Mountain Ambulance
Service, which services the Round Valley, Alpine, Greer and Vernon areas;
Concho Valley Fire, Alpine Fire, Apache County Adult Probation and Apache
County Juvenile Probation and Puerco Valley Fire and Ambulance, as well as
the four Apache County Sheriff’s Office Districts and the jail
transportation vehicles, transporting prisoners to and from the courts
throughout the state.
The
strategic location’s of its repeaters gives the communications center
excellent coverage. The Communications Center also provides other agencies
with registrations checks, wants and warrants checks and requests for back
up and/or assistance calls. Other agencies relying on the communications
center are the United States Forest Service Law Enforcement, Arizona State
Parks, United States Park Service, Arizona Game and Fish and the Arizona
Motor Vehicle Division.
Ten
different radio frequencies and as many telephone lines allow dispatchers at
the communication center to accomplish the many demands placed on this
department.
The
communication center also handles all 9-1-1 calls for Apache County,
including the Navajo Nation and cell phones.
Communications specialists receive intensive training covering numerous
areas, including emergency medical dispatch, first aid and CPR and
additional 24-hour EMD course.
Communications specialists also receive training on the Arizona Criminal
Justice Information System (ACJIS), and must be
certified on all the systems. They are required by law to pass a
written examination within six months of commencing employment.
Communications specialists are required to operate the telephone system for
the hearing impaired (TDD system) proficiently. They must be able to answer
and handle all 9-1-1 calls, including violent and medical emergency calls.
Dispatchers are the first source of the lifeline between the public and the
officers in an emergency situation. Well-trained dispatchers save seconds
and seconds save lives. Therefore the Apache County Sheriff’s Office is
committed to continued training of the Apache County Communications
Specialists for the safety and well being of the public as well as the
officers they watch over.
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