Guest guest Posted April 3, 2002 Report Share Posted April 3, 2002 Angie, As to punishing officers, I believe I probably do it, intentionally or not. I have some free roving officers who believe they can do as they like, and if a toss up between officers, I will send them on a dog barking call or whatever. As to the suspicions, assuming you are computer based, you might check with the administrator of your computer system, and have them install a key logging program. It runs un-detected and will log all key strokes made on a computer. This would give you hard evidence if someone is doing something they shouldn't. Usually, once installed, most administration would probably keep it. Good luck on your situation. Larew NC911@... Troutman, NC Cornelius/Huntersville/son College Police Communications Iredell County Emergency Communications " A word to the wise isn't necessary, it is the stupid ones who need all the advice. " - Bill Cosby Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 3, 2002 Report Share Posted April 3, 2002 Excellent answers prior to me responding, reference the log/in, keystroke computer function. I also concur reference the bad vibes comment another fine one made here. If one doesn't " cut the mustard " ...get rid of the dog now. From experience where I work....when you keep the dogs...they come back to bite you in the " ass-ets " ahmmmmmm. Happy day...be safe~~ Cin in good ole Ohio Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 4, 2002 Report Share Posted April 4, 2002 I feel I may have mis-stated what I meant by punishing. I may have a choice of 3 officers working a zone. I have some officers that are aggressive, but I don't dislike them. I have found it is easier to give them the first call in their zone first to keep them occupied. This call for service may be handled by another officer if closer if that officer elects. We have been told to give the calls to the rookies because the older, more experienced officers have cases that they were working on. If we get a serious call, the more experienced officer is primary and the rookies become secondary. By keeping this officer occupied with the less serious in nature calls, they gain experience. We have wrecked 4 cars this year by rookies exceeding their experience while driving. Most have been minor enough and no injuries have occurred. I keep finding officers appear to be more the minimum age of 21 that we hire, and are very impulsive. They will walk into a situation with no backup, gun drawn. I feel if they were given a little more time, he/she may see the wisdom in waiting for a back up unit. Our town is not that big, that the average response time is 1 1/2 min to just about any call. After about 3 years, most officers have gained that experience. Larew NC911@... Troutman, NC Cornelius/Huntersville/son College Police Communications Iredell County Emergency Communications " A word to the wise isn't necessary, it is the stupid ones who need all the advice. " - Bill Cosby Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 4, 2002 Report Share Posted April 4, 2002 Well, the situation has changed slightly. We now know that the way the traffic citations were deleted would have required a little more knowledge than this girl currently possesses. Happily (?), she hasn't put enough effort into her training to understand the database system that well. I would be seriously surprised if she was the one responsible for that. Sadly, the backup of our database didn't entirely take, so we're now entering (I'm not kidding) a month and a half's worth of citations by HAND. Probably close to two hundred citations, all with associated actions (traffic court appeal, etc). Sucks majorly. And it also looks like it is possible the database has a glitch in it that may have allowed the log to be deleted. It's still possible that it was deleted manually, but there's no proof of either way. Yes, to those who are probably asking themselves, we have called our computer tech in on this. She's working on figuring out what happened, not just to possibily find out who, but also to keep it from happening a second time. But we're still left with how we have caught her in areas she's not authorized to be in. More than once. And we've frequently found calls that she didn't log. If they were uneventful patrols or something, then we might just nag her about it. But these were things like letting people into areas after-hours. Then the logs she does write are missing times because she didn't bother to ask for them from the person working the radio (me). Worst of all is the way I don't like her. On a personal level, I find her annoying and I get bad vibes. Professionally, she's sloppy, careless, and doesn't seem inclined to improve. I mean, I remember making some of the mistakes she's making, but that was when I had less experience than she did and I worked my ass off to improve. She doesn't seem to think it's even a problem. I guess the reason I'm telling y'all this (aside from venting in a direction that is least likely to cause harm, unlike gossiping at work), is that I'm trying to decide if I should publicly complain. To answer a question asked about my position in the department, I'm a student dispatcher, close enough to being through with training that it's a matter of me asking to be tested by the director. I have no official authority over anyone at all. However, our office is largely run by consensus. There are only 11 dispatchers, counting me, and 8 officers. If the majority of dispatchers and officers agree on an issue, the director does his best to comply with our opinion. (That's the great part of being a small department.) Let me explain the situation a little more: 1) We're short-handed, so we need pretty much every warm body we can get. But by the same token, we don't have anyone who can pick up the slack for a dead weight. 2) We're small. We absolutely have to get along with each other because there is no way to avoid people you can't work with. 3) We're small. Rumor is powerful. All it takes is an easy-going person (which I have a reputation for being) to complain and things get done fairly quickly. 4) It's possible for a trainee to be fired for some pretty simple things. This girl was nearly fired about a month ago because one of the officers overheard her telling one of her friends, " I don't need this training crap, " referring to her dispatcher training. (Yes, honey, you do. You suck at your job.) 5) I have not formally complained about anything she has done, but I have not hidden my opinion of her from people who ask. Everyone I talk to (which is almost all of the dispatchers) shares my low opinion of her. General consensus seems to be that she's either a slacker or has a bad attitude. There is doubt about her ethics, which is not a complaint I've heard voiced about anyone in the time I've been here. 90%-serious complaints about someone being a slacker, yes. Joking complaints (or half-serious) about someone being an idiot, yes. Concerns about someone deleting logs or covering up for her friends? No. 6) The officers, in a change from their usual, are almost unanimous in their dislike of her. Normally, they go by personal preference, but I think her negative training comment in front of one of the officers really shocked them. 7) On a personal level, I don't think I want to be responsible for getting her fired because she's a friend of a friend. I want her to be fired, I just don't want it to be me... It feels kind of an emotional cop-out, I guess. If I had to give each of these points a number between one and ten with ten being the most important, that would be down around a two. Wow, reading over all of that, it certainly paints a nasty picture. I guess my only real concern is that I'm basing my opinion of her too much on the rumor mill and too little on direct experience. Except I have seen her forget logs and blow off the seriousness of mistakes. I dunno. Guess I'm a little confused on this whole issue. Opinions welcome... Angie Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 5, 2002 Report Share Posted April 5, 2002 Okay....As I read this, I had flashbacks of a similar situation that happened in our department. Nice guy, but rubbed people the wrong way. Nothing we could really put our finger on, but made comments that really tickled those little hairs on the back of the officers neck. (Like when we described a problem mental student who was a nuclear science major and how we were handling it, he felt that the university ought to do more to keep the guy in school....okay, he's wearing sweatsuits, gloves, and ski masks on 100 degree days in August - jumping out at girls between parked cars in lots. Making bombs in his apartment...among other things.) He also did not understand the need for keeping a radio log and writing down traffic stop information...like LP and location....correctly on the log. He would change words between what the call actually was and what he dispatched it as....like smoke in a building to a Fire Alarm. Also, held a call of a violent person in a building - then dispatching it as something benign. (I can't remember what it was) He didn't see problems with these either. It was like he was missing the whole point of what we did. He was in training and we were documenting all these things. The director was going to fire him, until he found out that he had a wife and child and his wife was pregnant...and it was right before Christmas. Okay, so this guys wife and children are more important than our officer's wives and children? I finally started making tapes of his calls and played them for the director SHOWING the problems we were having...but still he wouldn't get rid of him. We had been discussing the problems with this trainee for some time. Our training program was 9 weeks, but we were already approaching 16 weeks of training for this guy. I finally told him (I'm paraphrasing because I wasn't this blunt) that he wasn't improving and that I would never approve his getting out of the training program, so you might want to start looking for another job. I felt bad, but I would have hated to know what the consequences might have been if I had relented. We were also shorthanded, but not direly. THAT would come later. annette hallmark tamu utilities (formerly UPD) --- scully_dana_k wrote: > But we're still left with how we have caught her in > areas she's not > authorized to be in. More than once. And we've > frequently found > calls that she didn't log. If they were uneventful > patrols or > something, then we might just nag her about it. But > these were > things like letting people into areas after-hours. > Then the logs she > does write are missing times because she didn't > bother to ask for > them from the person working the radio (me). > > Worst of all is the way I don't like her. On a > personal level, I > find her annoying and I get bad vibes. > Professionally, she's sloppy, > careless, and doesn't seem inclined to improve. I > mean, I remember > making some of the mistakes she's making, but that > was when I had > less experience than she did and I worked my ass off > to improve. She > doesn't seem to think it's even a problem. > __________________________________________________ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 5, 2002 Report Share Posted April 5, 2002 Thanks so much for the laugh... I needed that... Advice I might be taking, too. :oP Angie --- " Felice " <jaybuck1@f...> wrote: > Ok in the modern style of survivor. > You are voted off the Island. Don't take > it personally though. that is my answer > end of discussion. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 5, 2002 Report Share Posted April 5, 2002 Well, I suppose that's one good thing about all of this: our director is willing to support us in many ways. He actually tried to fire her a month ago, but two of the dispatchers pleaded for her job. (Yes, they now regret this.) I have a feeling that if we were to come to him with a list of what she's done wrong (or failed to do), she would probably get fired that day. That's one of the things about the university... Not a lot of paperwork involved in firing a student. But I think I'm going to start documenting the verifiable stuff to see if it's really as bad as I think it is. I have a reputation for being fair and honest, so chances are I will be listened to if I complain. I want to make sure I don't do that until I'm positive there's more reason than that she has a personality that's incompatible with the office. :oP Angie --- Annette Hallmark <mahallmark@y...> wrote: > He was in training and we were documenting > all these things. The director was going > to fire him, until he found out that he > had a wife and child and his wife was > pregnant...and it was right before Christmas. > Okay, so this guys wife and children are > more important than our officer's wives > and children? I finally started making > tapes of his calls and played them for the > director SHOWING the problems we were > having...but still he wouldn't get rid of him. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 10, 2002 Report Share Posted April 10, 2002 << Organizational regulations notwithstanding, is it (un)ethical to " punish " an officer by sending them to all the worst calls? >> What you think of as a totally horrible call may actually be a call that someone else loves to take. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 13, 2002 Report Share Posted April 13, 2002 New info on the problem trainee: She's finally done something big enough for us to document and nail her for. She logged a SEARCH WARRANT as a " routine patrol, " left out *ALL* of the important information, and didn't even mention why the officers were where they were. I'm completely floored that the training officer with her didn't correct it, but she also shouldn't have to be double checking all of this trainee's work this far into training. She's been training long enough that she should know what the relevant details are. The other dispatcher that I showed the logs to is so amazingly pissed off that he's writing a memo to our head honcho. Knowing our boss, she's likely to be fired for this, especially because she is not improving noticably and has a tendency to be suddenly sick when she's assigned to " unpleasant " shifts like graveyards. It's odd, but I really want her to be fired. I have never wanted someone to lose their job before and I don't know why I dislike her so intensely. All I know is that I will breathe easier when she's out of this office and someone else's problem. *tired sigh* Angie --- Annette Hallmark <mahallmark@y...> wrote: > Okay....As I read this, I had flashbacks of a similar > situation that happened in our department. Nice guy, > but rubbed people the wrong way. Nothing we could > really put our finger on, but made comments that > really tickled those little hairs on the back of the > officers neck. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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