New software helps police find cell-phone users
- Share via
Andrew Edwards
The Laguna Beach Police Department recently installed new software
designed to enable dispatchers to pinpoint emergency calls made using
cell phones.
Currently, when a person dials 911 from a land line, a local
dispatcher is able to trace the caller’s location and direct police
or firefighters to the caller’s address. But when a person in Laguna
Beach makes a 911 call from a cell phone, not only do Laguna
dispatchers not have the person’s location, they are not the first
people to pick up the phone. California Highway Patrol dispatchers
take all cell-phone calls in Orange County.
But local and state officials working on the initiative, dubbed
the Wireless E911 Project, hope Laguna dispatchers answer Laguna
calls in 2005, Laguna Beach Police Sgt. Louise Callus said.
The software, Vesta 911, is designed to be so precise that
dispatchers will be able to get nearly exact locations of callers
using GPS-equipped phones. The installation was completed on June 24.
“Give us our wireless 911 calls, our response time’s going to be a
lot faster,” she said.
The state gave Laguna police the money to buy the software, and
the department had enough left over to purchase ergonomic furniture
for its dispatchers, Callus said.
Statewide, the total cost of the project is about $110 million.
That money is being raised by the 911 surcharge Californians shell
out when they pay their phone bill, said Barry Hemphill, deputy
director of telecommunications in the state Department of General
Services. The department is the state agency that oversees
California’s 911 program.
In Orange County, the local efforts to get the program in place
are headed by Lt. Colin Murphy of the Orange County Sheriff’s
Department. He said a task force is working with the major cell-phone
companies to sort through the thousands of cell-phone antennae in
Orange County, and trying to figure out which city should get the
call from each antenna.
Some parts of California are already underway on the project. In
Los Angeles and the Bay Area, public safety agencies started
implementing the program in 2003. A Department of General Services
chart dated June 4 shows that in the Los Angeles area, 18 local
police departments are taking wireless 911 calls.
“We determined to start with the heavy population areas where most
people would be served,” Hemphill said.
Though it is still too early to tell how well the system is
working, Highway Patrol dispatchers are able to take more calls and
get more information, since other cities are reducing their workload
and have a better idea of where a caller is, said Thomas Prigatano,
Highway Patrol communications supervisor for Los Angeles.
“Service to the public is improving,” he said.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.