SLIGHTLY
OFF THE MARK
In
December I hit a major milestone: My 20th anniversary as a member of
the Noble County Sheriff’s Department.
Doesn’t
seem possible, does it? I mean, I seem so young and fresh …
I’ve
often joked that anyone who works for more than ten years in a dispatch center
should automatically be considered certifiably insane. Since then I’ve learned
that the average career length for a dispatcher is around seven years – which
means my joke isn’t so funny anymore, is it?
But I
didn’t start as a communications officer (I didn’t make that term up, honest).
I was working a factory job when I got the call to come in and apply for a job
as a jail officer, known back then as a jailer or turnkey. I took a $1.22 an
hour pay cut in order to put on a uniform and watch drunks throw up – clearly,
I really hated working in the
factory.
At the
time the jail officers often worked alone, while up in the communications
department one dispatcher worked many of the shifts. It got awfully lonely,
especially when a transport came in with a load of new prisoners, or police
broke up a minor consuming party. All of the sudden I was the only uniform in a
sea of people waiting to be booked in, dressed down, and placed near a
bathroom.
There
were two things about inmates that surprised me: One was that some of them,
once removed from temptation, became some of the most decent, and in the case
of trustees hard working, people you’d ever want to meet.
The
other was that a certain percentage of them were just nasty pieces of uncaring
scum, and absolutely no act of kindness or second chances did a darn thing to
change that. When those people got booked out (you could usually tell which was
which), I’d say, “See you soon.”
“I’m
never coming back here again,” they’d
reply.
But,
with the exception of those who died or got put away in some other facility,
they always did. Sadly, so did a lot of the nice guys who, once out on their
own, just couldn’t stay away from the booze and drugs.
Eventually
I got tired of being breathed on by people who often never saw a doctor except
when incarcerated, so I applied to move into dispatch. I don’t recall how long
I lasted in the jail, but I figured dispatch, where I didn’t have to go face to
face with people who were just misunderstood (ask them, they’ll tell you), had
to be less stressful.
Stop
laughing, I really thought that.
How can
I explain what dispatching is like? Let’s say you want to be a performer, so
you learn to juggle chain saws. But that’s not good enough for today’s
sophisticated audiences, so you also learn how to balance 100 spinning plates
at the same time. But that’s not getting you booked, so you learn how to throw
knives at a spinning target while singing The Star Spangled Banner.
Dispatching
is like doing all those simultaneously.
Not for
the whole shift, of course. Anyone who’s ever worked retail is familiar with
the concept of feast or famine. Say you’re at a grocery store, and shoppers
start trickling in, one after another, at different times and getting different
amounts of stuff.
Then
they all want to check out at the same time.
Then they finish checking out, and there’s no one in the store … until people start trickling in again, one after another. That’s what being an emergency dispatcher is like: Feast or famine. Dispatch centers could save a lot of money by scheduling extra people only during the busy period – except no one ever knows then the busy periods will be. I’ve seen quite Friday evenings (although not many of them), and I’ve seen all heck break loose at 5 a.m.
Once I was
working alone in dispatch (These days we’re so much busier that one dispatcher
is a laughable, terrifying concept), when, at around 5:30 in the morning, black
ice started forming on pavement all over the county. You might say all the
drivers crossing all the bridges in the county decided to check out at the same
time, some of them coming close to checking out in the fatal sense of the word.
No
warning. No chance to call in help. I went from nothing on the board to three
dozen accidents in ten minutes. Another example of that is when one giant fiery
crash happens and you have to dispatch half a dozen different agencies to it at
the same time.
It was fun. By which I mean, it wasn’t.
But at
least with calls like that what you need to do is pretty clear cut. Here are
some examples of the calls that make my head start throbbing:
Someone
calls 911 and starts with, “This isn’t an emergency …”
It’s an emergency line, bub.
“I have
a question …”
I have
an answer, but you’re not going to like it. This person invariably will involve
us in such a head scratcher that’ll take off pieces of my scalp.
“I had this problem back in December of 1998, and …”
We really do get calls like that. These are people who, if they were writing a book, would start out with “Chapter One: I am born.” You couldn’t get them to the point with a spear gun.
There
are other examples, but I can’t give you specifics until the book comes out on
the day of my retirement, December 14th, 2016. This is assuming I
can gather a single sane thought by then.
It’ll
be hard to autograph that book while in a straightjacket.
Congrats on 20 years, Mark! I bet that would be one interesting book!
ReplyDeleteWe'll see -- someday!
DeleteCongratulations and it's amazing that you can write humor after dealing with all that stress everyday.
ReplyDeleteThe humor helps the stress!
DeleteHappy Anniversary and keep up the great work! I think if YOU wrote a book and it started out, "I am born," it would still be fascinating!
ReplyDeleteMaybe we'll give that a shot someday!
DeleteCongratulations! 20 years is a long time! Great work! I'm sure you have enough stories from all of your experiences to write more volumes than an encyclopedia (and it would be more humorous and interesting, too). Take care!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Lena! Who knows ... but if I do write one about dispatching, it won't be till all the statues of limitations have run out!
DeleteCongratulations, Mark, on 20 years. Did I say I love this new design? This was a great read. Loved it. Talented, you are.
ReplyDeleteOh, the design -- that's all Emily! She's the arty person around here.
DeleteWhere does the time go?
ReplyDeleteBeats me -- but it goes there faster every year.
Delete