Dispatchers One Invisibility Cloaks.
Telecommunications are adaptive, they can shapeshift into someone taking control, or be calm and help someone who is erratic. They are the invisible force, out of the corner of an eye, the ones with the …
Telecommunications are adaptive, they can shapeshift into someone taking control, or be calm and help someone who is erratic. They are the invisible force, out of the corner of an eye, the ones with the …
Telecommunicators are blessed with superhuman speed. Within seconds, with very little information, they instinctively understand the situation, the needed response, and what the responders need to tackle the job. They use their superhuman speed to …
This is the first year FSU PD has ever had a Manager in the communication center, and I am looking for assistance with gifts ideas and ways our unsung heroes can celebrate this special event. …
Telecommunicators already process information from multiple sources at the same time, between juggling our callers, units on the radio, and the administrative messages terminal, plus the occasional fax. We’re busy people! If we could borrow …
Public safety telecommunicators have a very important job. PST’s are responsible for effectively carrying out a conversation with a caller so that they can provide them with the help they need. Telecommunicators can control a …
Telecommunicators are important in law enforcement and to the community. They are the first people you call when there is trouble. They get calls as small as a cat getting stuck in a tree or …
Public safety telecommunicators save lives every day. They are the unsung heroes who have an undying dedication to everyone. No matter what, they have to be on-call and ready for the day. They can’t ever …
Telecommunicators have the superpower to listen and take in what people are saying no matter the circumstances. When you answer a 911 call you have no idea if the caller on the other end is …
If telecommunications needed one superpower, it would be telepathy. Telepathy would eliminate the need for the calls in its entirety and would drastically decrease the amount of time needed to get help to our public …
Public safety communicators have the power to help people however they can. If someone calls in trouble they have the ability to help them in every way possible. They help save people from fires, robberies, …
Besides the ability to multitask, Public safety telecommunicators must have DISCERNMENT. You have to be able to use your common sense, listening skills, and training and apply it to the situation you are dealing with. …
Fingers as fast as a speeding bullet, ears tuned in to every background noise coming through the headset.. We never back down when our community needs us. Telecommunicators have tender hearts and a desire to …
I think the greatest Superpower that WE have as Telecommunicators is [com]Passion. We are passionate about the communities that we serve, the First Responders that we work with and that passion and compassion we have …
Being a telecommunicator is not for the weak. One must possess nerves of steel and a sense of calm to take calls ranging from non emergency to complete hysteria and the worst emergency imaginable. You …
Dispatchers should all be The Flash. By the time the caller told us what was going on, we would have ran over there, got all the info we needed and back on the phone and …
To be on the phone with a distraught parent/spouse/child and able to save their loved one who just died – that would be an amazing gift. The cries of the RP get to me, because …
As emergency operators we often have to place ourselves in the callers situation to better understand what is going on or to visualize their exact location. We would really benefit from the power or ability …
There are many incredible superpowers that we already claim as Telecommunications ROCKSTARS, from bionic hearing to supersonic multitasking to our automatic skill in switching from reclining in our seat to sitting straight up in our …
Dispatchers have the super power of Multi tasking! Phones/ Radios / Police / Fire / EMS / Public callers – happy, hysterical, mad, mental, upset, deaf, etc…/ coworkers/ computers / multiple screens / paper work …
Faster (at typing) than a speeding bullet, stronger (mentally) than the raging seas. Able to quell the fears and command the response from a single console. The calm in the chaos, the voice in the …
We brave the worst that Mother Nature has to offer just to get to work sometimes! Hurricanes, blizzards, flooding? No problem. We leave our families to go to work in some of the worst of …
No matter the situation self composure, transmitted over the radio or phone, shows that you are keeping it together for the caller. It defines that your doing your best for them to see it thru. …
I think Public Safety Telecommunicators should have the ability to REMOTE VIEW through the reporting parties eyes. What a superpower it would be! This would be very helpful when a reporting party is in shock …
This super power is determining the difference between an actual emergency or a mentally unstable caller making up a story with no emergency at all.
A Telecommunicator may not be able to stop a moving car or a falling building, but we have the power to gather all the information and send our hero partners to save those in need.
Anyone who has witnessed a telecommunicator in action can clearly tell you what superpowers they have! They bring clarity and calm to chaos on a daily basis!
If you get a weird creepy feeling about a call, even when they are telling you that all is OK, dispatch it and tell your responders that something just doesn’t feel right.
Last year for National Public Safety Telecommunicators Week, we asked you to name your superheroes. Since we agreed you are ALL superheroes, we want to know this year what makes you that way – we’re …
It’s that time of year again! Use the form below or add a comment to tell us how you celebrate NPSTW.