WA City Council Blocks 9-1-1 Integration

Nov. 27, 2018
After outcry from dispatchers and local firefighters, Spokane City Council has blocked the city from participating in a region-wide 9-1-1 integration.

Nov. 27 -- After outcry from dispatchers and the city’s firefighters union, the Spokane City Council overode the mayor’s veto and blocked the city’s participation in a planned regionwide 911 integration that critics say may not improve public safety.

Mayor David Condon called the council’s earlier unanimous vote to require city dispatchers to only work with city police and firefighters an overstep. It would not allow them to join the new Spokane Regional Emergency Communications center.

SREC would combine county emergency communications, Crime Check, Sheriff’s Office dispatchers and radio employees with city and fire dispatchers into a new center with a governing board made up of local public safety employees and administrators. The new system was set to go live next year.

Condon said the council did not have the authority to regulate or manage employees. And regardless of the outcome of an override vote, he still planned to continue to work toward 911 integration. In a letter accompanying his veto, he acknowledged that the new center has not yet released financial information, but said he anticipates integrating emergency communications with the county would save money, improve call capacity and the data gathered through Crime Check.

During Monday’s meeting, every council member except Lori Kinnear, who was absent, voted to override the mayor’s veto. Councilmembers, including Council President Ben Stuckart, said the mayor’s office has not shared information about how 911 integration would improve service and save money.

Councilwoman Karen Stratton said the city had received countless emails from employees and members asking for the council to override the mayor’s veto. She said the mayor’s office was ignoring both the employee’s and the council’s concerns.

“The biggest thing I’ve learned from those emails is this administration has completely ignored employees with 15, or 20 plus years of experience,” she said. “At some point, we need to stop and look at these employees and learn from them and listen to them.”

Randy Marler, president of Local 29, the union that represents about 300 fire employees for the city of Spokane and the Spokane Airport, penned a critical letter to the mayor’s office outlining how employees were excluded.

He called the lack of public financial information and data “perplexing” and asked the mayor to slow down the integration process to make sure it makes sense.

In an interview earlier this month, director for the new system Steve Reinke said he hoped council would still be open to integrating once they received a complete financial report.

___ (c)2018 The Spokesman-Review (Spokane, Wash.) Visit The Spokesman-Review (Spokane, Wash.) at www.spokesman.com Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

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