Our taxes pay for things like the police force, fire dept, and 9-1-1 Dispatchers. Our taxes cover this so that when an emergency hits we know that there will be someone on their way to help us when we call 9-1-1. But in Portland, Oregon, things have taken a turn for the worse. 9-1-1 callers are being put on hold sometimes for up to 10 minutes.
“People calling 911 to report a Sept. 4 shootout at a Pearl District restaurant and other emergencies in the following half-hour waited an average of more than 7.5 minutes before a dispatcher answered.
The lengthy hold time is far above the national standard of 15 to 20 seconds for 911 calls and the latest example of serious problems plaguing the city’s emergency dispatch system.
One man on social media complained that he was on hold for more than 9 minutes when he tried to report the shooting at Everybody Eats PDX. The Oregonian/OregonLive then sought public records from emergency dispatch to check what happened.
Bob Cozzie, director of Portland’s Bureau of Emergency Communications, acknowledged the unacceptable delay and said it’s time for the city to start considering routing non-emergency calls elsewhere or other solutions.
“I think it’s horrible. There’s no other way to state it,” he said.”
“The bureau tracks average 911 call answer times by month to gauge its track record. The data shows an average hold time of a minute. But it also shows a dramatic increase of 911 calls on hold for two minutes or longer starting in late spring and summer.”
Another striking jump of calls on hold for more than five minutes occurred in May and July, according to bureau figures released to the newsroom.
Compared to March, when only eight 911 calls took more than five minutes to answer, that number increased to 221 in May and more than doubled to 574 in July.
Compared to a year ago, the bureau has experienced a 20% to 45% increase in 911 calls so far this year depending on the week.
During July, for example, people made a total of 63,573 calls to 911. That represented a 22% jump from July 2020, according to bureau data. For comparison, 911 calls in July 2020 represented only a 2 percent increase over July 2019.
Cozzie said more than a dozen employees have retired, taken leaves of absence, been promoted or resigned over the past six months.
Current staff also are still in training on new medical and fire triage protocols that are intended to cut down on the number of fire trucks sent to low-level medical calls, he said.
“We’re at a tipping point now. It’s become unmanageable,” he said. “The system is broken.”
I get that the Emergency Communication Director is saying that the system is broken, but he should have been pushing to get more staff on stat. This is a job where the minutes matter and you can’t run it on a skeleton crew in a city. People rely on 9-1-1 to be there in their greatest times of need and 10 minutes is just not acceptable.