Completed in August 2016, the upgrades implemented in Montgomery’s 911 Call Center have visibly transformed both the facility itself and the workflow of its employees.
Mounted at the front of the room, a bright, 6×3 LCD video wall displays an arrangement of live camera feeds and real-time digital tools, including a P25 radio system, a Computer-Aided Dispatch (CAD) call mapping program, a Next Generation 9-1-1 system, and ShotSpotter, a real-time gunfire detection solution that maps the location of shots fired in the city. A Haivision Alpha video wall processor allows all of these applications to be displayed on the video wall simultaneously and arranged in any layout desired.
The team’s shift commander and supervisors sit directly in front of the video wall, controlling the content displayed on the screens. Seated opposite them at 28 new, ergonomic workstations facing the displays, the facility’s dispatchers scan the content on the video wall as they receive and respond to calls. The video wall’s high-resolution displays and ultra-narrow bezels ensure that all of the employees in the large room have a clear view of the content.
Provides dispatchers with real-time situational awareness
As dispatchers answer emergency calls, they now use the video wall to monitor their phone system, radio, and the CAD mapping platform, which shows the locations of emergency callers and response units on a live map of the city. Equipped with this real-time common operating picture, the dispatchers are now able to visualize patterns in incoming calls and quickly identify connections between incidents.
“The video wall provides everyone with a visual as to what’s going on throughout the city,” explains Larry Fisher. “If they have a call, and they see that the call pops up in the exact same area as the surrounding calls, then they can tell that it could be associated. When a call pops up in a different area, then they know it’s something different.”
Connects dispatchers and response units with critical information
When a call requires a response unit, dispatchers can now leverage the data displayed on the video wall to provide critical details to first responders. After connecting with a response unit, dispatchers use the video wall and the software tools at their workstations to gather further information and monitor developments in the situation. Maintaining contact with responders as they approach the scene, the dispatchers provide them with real-time updates and key information – like the locations of windows and exits in a building with an armed suspect.
“It helps get our officers more information as they’re responding to the calls, getting them prepared for what they’re going to experience when they get there,” says Maj. A.S. Tatum of the Montgomery Police Department, explaining how the new workflow helps responding police units. “Any additional information they can get will help them, once they get on the scene, to better save lives and protect themselves also.”
Simple, user-friendly control
When a situation demands a particular set of tools and information, supervisors use Haivision video wall software to quickly adjust the content on the video wall. Loaded on a simple touch panel, the user-friendly software offers a selection of custom layouts that have been pre-arranged for various situations.
“They change the content frequently,” explains Larry Fisher. “If news media has a story and they think it’s of interest to everybody, they’ll pull up a layout focused around the TV. If there’s something happening on a camera somewhere in the city, they’ll pull up that camera.”