Guest guest Posted August 27, 2001 Report Share Posted August 27, 2001 The Paso Robles PD on-duty sergeant approved a second visit this evening (despite having been shown my earlier post describing LAST night's visit) <grin> and I arrived about an hour before the change of shift between Lori and Tess Serna. I stayed just under 4 hrs. One major difference from the previous night: I got to see their CAD screen with NO pending or active incidents! ( " Oh, so THAT'S what it looks like! " ) Didn't last long, although it never got REALLY busy for extended periods of time. After Tess relieved Lori, I got the tour of the station that Deleena had not had time to provide Saturday night. (Hadda wait for one fella in custody to be moved from the " intake " area into his cell before that portion of the facility was open for a visitor like me.) Kind of typical Sunday night, what with the various domestic/child custody " issues " around kids returning - or not - to custodial parents. These calls either tied up a dispatcher on the phone to explain things or actually burst into disputes requiring unit response. (And one guy in custody - without even any kids involved - got that way because he just didn't " get " what an Emergency Protective Order really meant; he resisted understanding it well enough to earn a trip to county jail.) My my my - I'm more used to hearing THAT kind of language over the phone, not loudly, in person, and echoing off facility walls! Around 1840 or so, Lori got a flurry of calls and I picked up a non-emergency line only to hear the CHP Comm Center down here announce the transfer of a medical emergency - whoops! I got her attention REAL fast and she took that line while I answered another couple calls. I didn't even see her dispatch medics for it on the fire channel while she continued to speak with the caller. VERY smooth. (Later we figured out I missed it because I was busy in my temporary role as PRPD call-taker, listening to a helpful citizen's report of a possible drug transaction he THOUGHT he saw " go down " at a local convenience store.) There were two medical emergencies dispatched during this visit - there hadn't been ANY on Saturday night. Lori had been telling me about a 9-1-1 hang-up that had occurred earlier in her 12-hr shift, as a typical example of a domestic squabble which required officer response, when the lady at that same house dialed 9-1-1 again - right in the middle of Lori's tale. (Just goes to show ya that you CAN invoke these things...) The units went out there a total of 3 times before they brought the soon-to-be-ex-husband in for booking. (He was the loud, foul-mouthed unhappy guy who HAD been fairly calm the first couple of times they responded - first, early in the day, 2nd to be served the EPO and get some of his property as a result of that action, and the third time because he decided to pound on a back window and demand that the RP let him in so he could get the rest of his @! & $##@)* stuff.) A few traffic stops, a DUI arrest, some neighbor complaints, this report of an abandoned vehicle, that report of a " stolen vehicle " (that wasn't), two medical calls, lots of other " dispatcher handled w/out unit response " incidents. Fair amount of activity for just under 4 hrs, with only one dispatcher on duty at a time. I only answered about four calls, total, to help either Lori or Tess out while I was visiting. (This is the moment when I publicly thank their sergeants for granting me the privilege to help 'em out - and I sure didn't want them to wish they hadn't allowed me to assist during those flurries.) My grey eyes did turn a little green with jealousy at their full Internet access - not just e-mail - right at the same terminal as their CAD/RMS screens. Both Lori and Tess were just as pleasant and positive as Deleena had been; with me, in person and on the radio with their field personnel and in dealing with the public, and I don't think they were only putting on a good front for my benefit. After all, we DID natter about meaningful stuff and compare experiences as similarities arose. Truly nice gals. They're terribly excited about the (much larger) new facility that's being built right in their back lot as a combined Public Safety facility (not just separate PD here and the main FD across town, as it is now). I got to see the floor plan and artist's rendition of how the exterior should look. And the warm, balmy evening breezes only brought in one creepy critter, this time. It wasn't a trophy bug like the one I captured Saturday night. We THINK they're cicadas. Whatever they are, they ain't crickets (Deleena had one for comparison last night), they're larger than grass-hoppers and they fly noisily like freakin' mini-helicopters! I suppose I should admit that it's far better to deal with the occasional big bug than it is to find black widow spiders - in abundance - like we can find outside my Comm Center on a regular basis. Or the intrepid field mice that occasionally settle in during the winter months. Finding evidence of mouse is far creepier than experiencing a cicada in the Comm Center. My friends at PRPD shouldn't be dismayed that a bug or two startled me - 'cause those experiences are tame, compared to the bat that smacked into our open back door one late summer night. (The kind that navigate by radar and eat bugs, not the ones usually used at baseball fields or in the hands of bad guys!) Thanks again, Deleena, Lori, and Tess - I enjoyed every moment. But I'm kinda weird that way. <wink> ===== Happy to be here, proud to serve. Olmstead http://www.gryeyes.com __________________________________________________ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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