Okay... climbing on my soap box.
HEY... You police show writers... YES YOU... listen up!
There is a HUGE difference between robbery and burglary. It is one thing when a citizen calls up to say they got robbed, and after a couple questions we know it was a burglary.
BUT, even if you are an over-worked wordsmith, at least get the terminology right when it is a police official (whether officer or detective or dispatcher or member of the brass) is talking about a burglary, they don't tell another LEO about a "robbery" when it was a BURGLARY.
A writer is someone who uses words, hopefully in the correct context, to educate and entertain a reader. So learn the correct usage between Robbery and Burglary.
I love watching cop shows (I am a die-hard lover of all the CSI shows except CSI: Miami and of course Blue Bloods as I am still lusting after Tom Selleck 30 years later). But to watch them mis-use the comparison of robbery versus burglary, well... I yell at the screen. And wish I could boot the bootie of the writer of the scene.
So listen up you scene writers!! Get the terminology correct.!
That felt good. A little yelling never hurt anyone, right? Okay, time to climb off the soap box and get back to work.
Dispatchers work for half the pay of an officer but work at twice the stress level. A fact. And you wonder why I'm tired?
Wednesday, November 13, 2013
Friday, September 20, 2013
Why is Punishment Wrong?
Found this articule and thought to myself, what?? Really lady??
Wendy Chandler, Alabama Mom, Furious Over 'Corporal Punishment Consent Form'
Wendy Chandler, Alabama Mom, Furious Over 'Corporal Punishment Consent Form'
When Wendy Chandler received a back-to-school packet from her daughter’s Alabama elementary school in late August, she thought there had been a mistake. Inside the packet was a form that sought her permission to administer physical force as a form of discipline on her child. Surely this wasn't a form from 2013.
But there was no mistake. This “Corporal Punishment Parental Consent Form” was apparently sent to parents of Leeds Elementary School, asking them to specify whether or not they want corporal punishment used on their child. Forms that are not returned to the district are seen as implicit consent.
"According to Leeds City Schools Public Policy, parents or legal guardians who do not want corporal punishment to be administered to their child/children must inform the principal of the school on an annual basis,” the permission slip reads, in part.
“I really thought I was seeing things. I had to read it a few times,” Chandler said on the phone to The Huffington Post. “I checked off the ‘no’ box, but I realized a lot of kids are going to have the ‘yes’ box checked off.”
She also scrawled an impassioned note on the bottom of the form: "I can not imagine how it would ever be ok to show violence towards anyone. Hitting a child is beyond disgraceful. Anyone who could hit a child should be put in jail."
Leeds is one of many school districts in 19 states that allow school administrators to use physical force against students, according to the Center for Effective Discipline.
In the 2005 – 2006 school year, 223,190 school children in the country had physical force used against them by educators, according to the U.S. Department of Education's Office for Civil Rights. Approximately 4.5 percent of Alabama students were subjected to physical punishment that year -- the third-highest rate out of any state in the nation. And while nationwide support for corporal punishment is low, efforts to eradicate the practice seem mostly to be at a standstill, according to The New York Times.
Still, Chandler is trying to do her part to eradicate corporal punishment in her district and state. She started a Change.org petition asking President Obama and other elected officials to “STOP corporal punishment in all public schools,” and she is flooding the mailboxes of school administrators with literature about the dangers of physical discipline. She has also been in touch with fellow activists working to end corporal punishment across the country.
“I really don’t know what I’m doing, I’m just trying to change the rules,” Chandler told HuffPost. “My immediate concern is for all those other kids [whose parents checked yes on the form] because those children are my child’s future colleagues and neighbors.”
"According to Leeds City Schools Public Policy, parents or legal guardians who do not want corporal punishment to be administered to their child/children must inform the principal of the school on an annual basis,” the permission slip reads, in part.
“I really thought I was seeing things. I had to read it a few times,” Chandler said on the phone to The Huffington Post. “I checked off the ‘no’ box, but I realized a lot of kids are going to have the ‘yes’ box checked off.”
She also scrawled an impassioned note on the bottom of the form: "I can not imagine how it would ever be ok to show violence towards anyone. Hitting a child is beyond disgraceful. Anyone who could hit a child should be put in jail."
Leeds is one of many school districts in 19 states that allow school administrators to use physical force against students, according to the Center for Effective Discipline.
In the 2005 – 2006 school year, 223,190 school children in the country had physical force used against them by educators, according to the U.S. Department of Education's Office for Civil Rights. Approximately 4.5 percent of Alabama students were subjected to physical punishment that year -- the third-highest rate out of any state in the nation. And while nationwide support for corporal punishment is low, efforts to eradicate the practice seem mostly to be at a standstill, according to The New York Times.
Still, Chandler is trying to do her part to eradicate corporal punishment in her district and state. She started a Change.org petition asking President Obama and other elected officials to “STOP corporal punishment in all public schools,” and she is flooding the mailboxes of school administrators with literature about the dangers of physical discipline. She has also been in touch with fellow activists working to end corporal punishment across the country.
“I really don’t know what I’m doing, I’m just trying to change the rules,” Chandler told HuffPost. “My immediate concern is for all those other kids [whose parents checked yes on the form] because those children are my child’s future colleagues and neighbors.”
********
John Rossi
A Washington state student was terrorized in a bullying attack by peers -- and at some points, by the teacher. The incidents occurred in February at a Gig Harbor middle school. Cell phone footage shows more than a dozen students dragging the then-eighth-grade boy around the classroom, carrying him by his arms and legs, burying him under chairs, writing on his feet and stuffing his socks in his mouth. The antics last about 15 minutes while teacher John Rosi watches, and later joins in.Texas Teachers
A Houston, Texas teacher and teacher's aide have been removed from their classroom for allegedly disciplining their pre-K students by placing them in custodial closets they nicknamed "monster closets."Laurie Bailey-Cutkomp
Laurie Bailey-Cutkomp, a 47-year-old Zephyrhills High School science teacher in Zephyrhills, Fla., is under fire after photos of her students wearing dog collars as punishment for bad behavior surfaced on Facebook.Louise Losos
Clayton High School Principal Louise Losos resigned following a leave of absence after an accusation that Losos had created a Facebook profile pretending to be a student named Suzy Harriston.Patricia Mulholland
A middle school teacher in South Carolina has been accused of dragging a student under a table during class, telling the boy "this is what the Nazis do to Jews," police said. The 12-year-old student said he got up to sharpen a pencil at Bluffton Middle School on Wednesday when Patricia Mulholland grabbed him by his collar and said, "come here, Jew," police said. The teacher then dragged him 10 feet under a table and made the comment about Nazis, according to police.North Carolina Teacher
A state investigation was been opened at Hudson Middle School in Caldwell County, N.C., following allegations that a teacher forced a student with special needs to sit in a cardboard box as a disciplinary measure.Jack Conkling
Jack Conkling, a Prairie Hills Middle School social studies teacher and Buhler High School assistant women's basketball coach in Buhler, Kan., is under fire after equating being gay to being a murderer on his Facebook profile.New York Teachers
Teachers at a Brooklyn elementary school are accused of giving their students the answers on standardized tests. In return for high scores on those tests, teachers at Public School 94 were allegedly offered smaller classes and fewer non-English-speaking students.George C. Marshall High School Teacher
A Virginia high school English teacher was under investigation for allegedly asking the only black student in the class to read a poem in a "blacker" manner. Jordan Shumate, a ninth-grader at George C. Marshall High School in Falls Church, Va., says he was reading aloud Langston Hughes' "Ballad of the Landlord" when teacher Marilyn Bart interrupted him. "She told me, 'Blacker, Jordan -- c'mon, blacker. I thought you were black,'" Shumate said.Malibu Teacher
A teacher at Malibu High School in Malibu, Calif., was under investigation after ninth-grade student Dionne Evans went to local authorities claiming the educator slapped her six times for not bringing her notebook to class.Georgia Teacher
A kindergarten teacher in Georgia has stirred controversy after presenting one of her students with the "Bermuda Triangle Award," honoring the student's desk -- or "the place where things go in but never come back out."Kathleen Pyles
Kathleen Pyles, a math teacher at North End Middle School in Waterbury, Conn., was on paid leave while school officials investigate allegations that she addressed a black student with a racist remark. Parents and the NAACP spoke out during a Board of Education meeting, accusing Pyles of inappropriately calling a student "black boy" when she couldn't remember his name.Union Elementary School Official
Parents in Clinton, North Carolina, were outraged after an assistant principal gave a third-grader a strip search there. The Union Elementary School official believed the boy had stolen money and ordered him to strip to his boxers.Florida Teacher
A Tampa Bay, Fla. school teacher was suspended for three days without pay after allowing one of her students to write and present a speech that criticized a former Oakstead Elementary teacher by name.Matt Hansen
Matt Hansen, a 38-year-old teacher for the Fort Zumwalt School District in O'Fallon, Mo., has been charged with felony possession of child pornography after a local cyber crimes unit found he allegedly videotaped 80 male students undressing.Stephan Hudson
Diane John, the mother whose 15-year-old son suffered a beatdown at the hands of much larger teacher Stephan Hudson, sought criminal charges against the offending public school dean and sued the city for $5.5 million after being shown surveillance footage of the incident.Steve McClenning and Billie Madewell
The Scholars Academy Principal Steve McClenning and assistant Billie Madewell have both lost their jobs at the Quartzsite, Ariz. school after the two were caught passionately making out on video.Audrey Grabarkiewicz
Audrey Grabarkiewicz, a 46-year-old preschool teacher at Lake Bowen Baptist Church in Spartanburg, S.C., managed to avoid jail time despite being arrested for throwing alcohol and sex parties for teens last year.Texas Teacher
A Texas teacher lost her job after ordering more than 20 kindergartners to line up and hit a classmate accused of being a bully. The teacher at a suburban San Antonio school is accused of orchestrating the slugfest after a younger teaching colleague went to her seeking suggestions on how to discipline the 6-year-old, according to a police report from the Judson Independent School District.Marcy Rubenstein
Bronx teacher Marcy Rubenstein allegedly duct-taped a rowdy student to his chair while other classmates laughed and pushed him around, after she became irritated that the student repeatedly got up during a test.Samuel Fies
Indiana teacher Samuel Fies was fired from Highland High School after he was arrested and charged in December 2011 with multiple counts of sexual misconduct with a minor, child molestation, criminal confinement, child solicitation and attempted child seduction.John Freshwater
Ohio science teacher John Freshwater was fired in early 2011 after being accused of preaching religious beliefs in class and keeping a Bible on his desk. Freshwater appealed the firing, but a judge upheld the decision in October 2011.Jill Lyle
Jill Lyle, a substitute teacher in Santa Fe, N.M. was fired in November 2011 after she was reportedly found passed out drunk while on the job.Sean Loftis
Sean Loftis, a Florida substitute teacher who starred in gay porn films under the pseudonym Collin O'Neal, lost his teaching job in October 2011 after his X-rated activities came to light.Andrew Harris
Andrew Harris, a science teacher at Glacier Creek Middle School in Cross Plains, Wis. first lost his job for looking at porn at work. The school district decided in March 2012, however, that he would be offered to be reinstated and given back pay and benefits estimated at $200,000.Bernadette Camacho
Bernadette Camacho, a 39-year-old teacher in Queens, New York, was fired from Hillcrest High School in January 2012 after reportedly telling students they had their "brains in their ass" and attempting to bribe them to keep quiet.Unnamed Teacher
An unnamed teacher at Tallulah Elementary School in Tallulah, La. was fired in March 2012 after she failed to notice two third grade students allegedly having oral sex under a classroom table.D.C. Teacher
A teacher at the Friendship Public Charter School in Washington, D.C. was fired after she allegedly taped Christian Washington, a 9-year-old vision-impaired student, to his classroom chair.D.C. Teacher
A Washington, D.C. teacher was fired in March 2012 for sending home violent, morbid and traumatizing math problems to third graders at Center City Public Charter School's Trinidad campus.Brooke Harris
Teacher Brooke Harris says she was let go from her position at Pontiac Academy for Excellence in Pontiac, Mich., in March after attempting to help students organize a hoodie-themed fundraiser for the family of Trayvon Martin. In this AP photo, a man wears a hoodie and a scarf with the likeness of Trayvon Martin during a "One Thousand Hoodies March for Trayvon Martin" event Thursday, March 29, 2012 in Minneapolis. (AP Photo/The Star Tribune, Renee Jones Schneider)Jarretta Hamilton
Jarretta Hamilton, a fourth grade teacher, was fired from the Southland Christian School in St. Cloud, Fla. in 2009 because the child she was carrying was conceived two months before she and her husband married.Emily Herx
Indiana teacher Emily Herx says she was fired from her Roman Catholic school -- St. Vincent de Paul school in Fort Wayne -- for using in vitro fertilization to try to get pregnant.Meredith Burris Pruitt
31-year-old Meredith Burris Pruitt was fired in March 2012 from Forestview High School in Gastonia, N.C. after she was accused of selling, and employing students to help sell, prescription drugs around the school.Jeffrey Robert Sears Jr.
Jeffrey R. Sears Jr., a 29-year-old former teacher at Glen Burnie High School, faces more than 50 years in prison after allegedly having sex with 15 and 16-year-old students over the course of two years.Megan Denman
Megan Denman, a 29-year-old social sciences teacher at Hoover High School in Fresno, Calif. was placed on paid leave in the spring of 2012 for allegedly performing oral sex on and sleeping with a student who was under the age of 18.Stacie Halas
California teacher Stacie Halas was fired from Richard B. Haydock Intermediate School in April 2012 for performing in a pornographic video.
Let's see if I get this right. A kid acts out in the classroom or playground. Maybe throws things in classroom or playground that hits another student or the teacher. So the kid is sent to the Principal's office for discipline. But, due to the move against corporal punishment that Wendy Chandler has made possible, the Principal can only wag his finger at the child and say, "No, No."
The Principal calls the kid's parents, and maybe one of them shows up to pick up the child. Principal tells the parent(s) what damage was created by the child's actions, usually an hour or more after the incident. Parents ask the Principal, "What do you want us to do about it? We can put the kid on restriction, but we work and can't monitor the child's every action. Besides, it looks like you already expelled the kid for a couple days from school. How are we suppose to monitor our child while we're working?"
Once again, parent(s) are expecting the school to teach the children discipline. Once again, parent(s) are abdicating their parental responsibility to their child to the school. After all, the school probably sees them more than the parent(s).
Okay, then Wendy Chandler (and others like you), let me ask you this: How are schools suppose to protect the children on campus from violence brought on by other students? Do you really think a finger wag and possible expulsion is going to be enough? At what point of violence against a classmate or teacher is it permission able to spank a child?
Wendy Chandler, have you contacted the school district to ask what they mean by "corporal punishment"? Wendy Chandler, have you found out what actions determine "corporal punishment"? Wendy Chandler, how are you going to feel when it is your kid hurt, possibly in the hospital due to injuries, that come from the actions of another classmate? Wendy Chandler, do you think wagging a finger at that child will deliver the message that there are bad consequences for bad actions?
I deal with "kids" who were never truly held responsible for their actions while growing up every day. As adults, they still aren't catching on that there will be punishment for their misdeeds. After all, they got away with it while growing up, why should they worry about it now?
If the "corporal punishment" is spanking, but that action comes after other levels of punishment, like after school detention, cleaning up campus detail, etc are met, why is it wrong to spank?
Too many parents are not part of the child's every day activities. Parents are not as involved in schools activities, PTA, classroom volunteers, like there was when I was growing up. And yes, I understand you work full time, but there are so many ways you can be of service and then be there front line to witness the ongoing responsibilities and problems our educators face every day.
Since there are too many parents who say, "Not my child, my child never would act out like that," or say, "What do you mean they can't come to school because of their actions," corporal punishment is needed. Schools need the authority and ability to punish a child appropriately to the level of misdeed that is warranted.
Let's get real. They aren't getting strung up by their feet and hands or being whipped.
They are being spanked when their actions have determined that wagging a finger or working school yard clean up is not enough. Grow up Wendy Chandler. Look at the world around you. Too many kids have grown up into out of control adults because they don't know how to behave in an acceptable manner.
Saturday, August 17, 2013
An Angel of a Dispatcher
From Huff Post Good News section::
Don't believe in guardian angels? This story might change your mind.
A bride-to-be from Kent, Wash., had her wedding dress stolen on the morning of her ceremony last weekend.
But her special day wasn't ruined -- all thanks to the efforts of a big-hearted 911 dispatcher.
The bride, identified as Amanda in ABC's report, called 911 about the incident on Sunday morning and told dispatcher Candice that her $6,000 wedding dress was stolen from her car hours before she planned to get married.
“I.. asked when the ceremony was scheduled," Candice, whose last name has not been reported, told the News Tribune. "When she said ‘today,’ my heart broke in two for her.”
Instead of simply filing a report, Candice asked her manager if she could offer the bride the dress she wore at her own wedding 18 months ago.
"We bought our dresses at the same store which is pretty ironic. Then, to make it even more awesome, we are about the same size so it worked out pretty well," Candice said in an interview with KIRO Radio.
Candice enlisted the help of her husband Brandon, who had luckily stayed home from a camping trip, to help fetch the dress from her parents' attic in Gig Harbor. Her family worked together to ensure that Amanda had the dress before the wedding.
The ceremony went off without a hitch.
“If I hadn’t taken that call, I wouldn’t have heard about it,” Candice told the News Tribune. “If she wasn’t my size, it wouldn’t have worked. If my husband had gone camping instead of staying home, I couldn’t have gotten to the dress. God does awesome things, and this woman, whose wedding day might have been ruined, had her special day, after all.”
****
Yes, folks... a real honest to goodness here on earth angel. Through her need to serve her community as a police dispatcher, the angel here - Candice, was able to do more than handle the penal code violation of this poor woman's stolen shining moment attire (aka wedding dress). Candice stepped up and shared her own, recently worn matrimonial vestment.
Kudos to Police Dispatcher Candice!!
Don't believe in guardian angels? This story might change your mind.
A bride-to-be from Kent, Wash., had her wedding dress stolen on the morning of her ceremony last weekend.
But her special day wasn't ruined -- all thanks to the efforts of a big-hearted 911 dispatcher.
The bride, identified as Amanda in ABC's report, called 911 about the incident on Sunday morning and told dispatcher Candice that her $6,000 wedding dress was stolen from her car hours before she planned to get married.
“I.. asked when the ceremony was scheduled," Candice, whose last name has not been reported, told the News Tribune. "When she said ‘today,’ my heart broke in two for her.”
Instead of simply filing a report, Candice asked her manager if she could offer the bride the dress she wore at her own wedding 18 months ago.
"We bought our dresses at the same store which is pretty ironic. Then, to make it even more awesome, we are about the same size so it worked out pretty well," Candice said in an interview with KIRO Radio.
Candice enlisted the help of her husband Brandon, who had luckily stayed home from a camping trip, to help fetch the dress from her parents' attic in Gig Harbor. Her family worked together to ensure that Amanda had the dress before the wedding.
The ceremony went off without a hitch.
“If I hadn’t taken that call, I wouldn’t have heard about it,” Candice told the News Tribune. “If she wasn’t my size, it wouldn’t have worked. If my husband had gone camping instead of staying home, I couldn’t have gotten to the dress. God does awesome things, and this woman, whose wedding day might have been ruined, had her special day, after all.”
****
Yes, folks... a real honest to goodness here on earth angel. Through her need to serve her community as a police dispatcher, the angel here - Candice, was able to do more than handle the penal code violation of this poor woman's stolen shining moment attire (aka wedding dress). Candice stepped up and shared her own, recently worn matrimonial vestment.
Kudos to Police Dispatcher Candice!!
Monday, June 17, 2013
NY EMT Dispatcher Spends 8 Hours on Phone to Locate Patient
NY EMT Dispatcher Spends 8 Hours on Phone to Locate Patient
This is a great article. It shows that we dispatchers work very hard to help people. And even save lives.
But the last sentence raised my hackles:
"The department has been petitioned for Hilman-Payne (the wonderful dispatcher this article is about) to receive some sort of special recognition for her work and Long (the FDNY spokesman) said the petition will be taken under advisement."
What?!?! Excuse me?!?! What advisement?!?! Taken under "advisement"?!?!
That man should be kissing the feet of Hilman-Payne for the great work AND the great PR she just brought to that department.
If it had been a fireman, there would, no doubt, be a ticker tape parade under discussion. BUT (and I see this with every law enforcement or fire department) when it is a dispatcher that goes above and beyond, when it is a dispatcher that saves the life (of citizen or officer), EVERY law enforcement or fire department thinks long and hard about what, if any, acknowledgement they will provide.
After all, it is their thinking that WE (all dispatchers) are just doing our job.
E-X-C-U-S-E M-E?!?!
It will be interesting to see if the heroine of this article, Joann Hilman-Payne, will receive any department recognition. My guess, she will be told she got her name in the newspaper and that she will receive a little pat on the head, without witnesses of course.
My hat is off to you Joann Hilman-Payne. You were showing yourself to the world as an "A" Game player in the world of emergency communications. And if I could, I would buy you a sash to wear that read, "#1 Dispatcher".
This is a great article. It shows that we dispatchers work very hard to help people. And even save lives.
But the last sentence raised my hackles:
"The department has been petitioned for Hilman-Payne (the wonderful dispatcher this article is about) to receive some sort of special recognition for her work and Long (the FDNY spokesman) said the petition will be taken under advisement."
What?!?! Excuse me?!?! What advisement?!?! Taken under "advisement"?!?!
That man should be kissing the feet of Hilman-Payne for the great work AND the great PR she just brought to that department.
If it had been a fireman, there would, no doubt, be a ticker tape parade under discussion. BUT (and I see this with every law enforcement or fire department) when it is a dispatcher that goes above and beyond, when it is a dispatcher that saves the life (of citizen or officer), EVERY law enforcement or fire department thinks long and hard about what, if any, acknowledgement they will provide.
After all, it is their thinking that WE (all dispatchers) are just doing our job.
E-X-C-U-S-E M-E?!?!
It will be interesting to see if the heroine of this article, Joann Hilman-Payne, will receive any department recognition. My guess, she will be told she got her name in the newspaper and that she will receive a little pat on the head, without witnesses of course.
My hat is off to you Joann Hilman-Payne. You were showing yourself to the world as an "A" Game player in the world of emergency communications. And if I could, I would buy you a sash to wear that read, "#1 Dispatcher".
Friday, June 7, 2013
Like... ah... You Know?
Major pet peeve time.
Received a call from a young lady who was seeking information. But it takes her, no joke, two solid minutes of slipping into phrases and words of "like... ah.. you know.." every few words before she was capable of giving me a drift of the information she was inquiring for.
Though we glorious dispatchers also receive phone calls of 4-letter words sprinkling a question or comment, it drives me around the bend to hear "like... ah... you know" several times in a short conversation.
And then, this word seeking lack of vocabulary speaking young woman, asks a question but doesn't allow me to answer, because she has started talk, like, not sure, ah..., like, how to get the, like, you know, who to contact, like, maybe we should, ah..., but then, like...
You get the picture.
I happen to know this young female is a college student. Her diatribe brought forth that little piece of information nugget. What a waste of good money! Clearly she is not an English major. Maybe a art history major looking for a husband? Cruel, yes. But so irritating to listen to.
But it also took me back to my days of working for a very large agency and their large dispatching unit. Listing to fellow dispatchers who repeatedly say, "okay?". Clearly things are not okay if people are calling you in the first place. But to continuously through a conversation or the providing of information, "okay" is not something that needs repeating numerous times.
Okay? I mean, like, it is so, ah, you know, a bother to work through. Okay?
Received a call from a young lady who was seeking information. But it takes her, no joke, two solid minutes of slipping into phrases and words of "like... ah.. you know.." every few words before she was capable of giving me a drift of the information she was inquiring for.
Though we glorious dispatchers also receive phone calls of 4-letter words sprinkling a question or comment, it drives me around the bend to hear "like... ah... you know" several times in a short conversation.
And then, this word seeking lack of vocabulary speaking young woman, asks a question but doesn't allow me to answer, because she has started talk, like, not sure, ah..., like, how to get the, like, you know, who to contact, like, maybe we should, ah..., but then, like...
You get the picture.
I happen to know this young female is a college student. Her diatribe brought forth that little piece of information nugget. What a waste of good money! Clearly she is not an English major. Maybe a art history major looking for a husband? Cruel, yes. But so irritating to listen to.
But it also took me back to my days of working for a very large agency and their large dispatching unit. Listing to fellow dispatchers who repeatedly say, "okay?". Clearly things are not okay if people are calling you in the first place. But to continuously through a conversation or the providing of information, "okay" is not something that needs repeating numerous times.
Okay? I mean, like, it is so, ah, you know, a bother to work through. Okay?
Monday, April 29, 2013
Hiring Drug Sniffing Dog
Parents can hire drug-sniffing dog to see if their kids have drugs
Posted on: 9:31 pm, April 25, 2013, by Boris Sanchez, updated on: 05:58pm, April 28, 2013
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DENVER — A special tool with four-legs and a talented nose typically used by police to take down suspects and find narcotics every day, is now available for parents to hire.
“It’s just a tool that parents can use to x-ray into their kid’s room and see what’s going on in a non-invasive way,” said Mark Haines, the owner of K-9 Force Security, a new company based in Ft. Collins.
Along with Storm, his two-year old German Shepard puppy, Haines offers parents the services of a drug-sniffing dog for a fee.
“Given a choice between dealing with the issue head on and honestly with your child, versus waiting two or three years down the road — dealing with addiction, maybe jail time, maybe worse… I’m choosing the drug search every time,” Haines said.
Storm has been trained to detect six major drugs, including marijuana, cocaine, methamphetamine, ecstasy, heroin, psilocybin mushrooms, and even some opiate-based medications like OxyContin.
“It’s not very often that I get to train a dog as sociable as Storm,” said Joe Clingan, who has trained roughly 600 K-9 teams over a nearly 40-year career. He helped bring Storm up to speed. “He’s very direct and very methodical and accurate.”
When Storm enters a home, Haines guides him around, using the command “find the dope.” Once Storm sniffs out a narcotic, he simply sits down, looks at his trainer, and waits for a treat.
“Law enforcement is just overbooked,” Clingan said. “They’re busy, they can’t take the time out to go to an individual’s home and do a drug search.”
Haines says he initially began K-9 Force Security as a way to help employers keep their businesses drug-free. But after an employee at an office he searched saw what Storm could do, she gave him a call.
“I had just noticed some changes in my teenaged son’s behavior and moods,” said the client, who did not want to be identified.
She says Storm found drug paraphernalia inside her home, confirming suspicions about her son using drugs.
“At first of course, (my son) was just irritated and angry with us, but now he’s adjusting well to it,” said the client. “He’s got a better attitude, his grades are improving, so obviously, things are looking up for him.”
“John,” another of Mark’s clients who did not want to be identified, says he was hesitant to hire a drug sniffing dog because it seemed like a drastic and invasive step — until he saw the results.
“I was having some concerns with one of my children, and I didn’t exactly know how to approach it,” said John. “But when the dog actually alerted, it all made sense… It opened a door to where I had some credibility in what I was actually talking about, so it’s just been wonderful since.”
“If one of Storm’s searches is able to help a parent get their kid off drugs,” said Haines, “then that’s a good day’s work.”
In case you’re interested in hiring Mark and Storm — call (970) 373-9935 or visit their website.
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Okay... my thoughts.
What Great Freaking Parents Are These!!!
You're a parent who suspects that your child has a drug or alcohol use/abuse problem. Instead of pretending that you're not seeing the signs, like grades dropping - being more anti-social at home - bloodshot eyes - slurred speech - belligerent over everything - you get proactive and check it out. It is hard to find hidden stashes.
Not all of the drugs are in the backpacks or a cigar box full of stuff under the bed. Kids can get very sneaky in hiding items they don't want their parents to know about.
Instead of waiting until the child hits bottom, or dies, the parents that hire the drug sniffing dog is actively confirming either their child is using drugs or is not. Yes, the child (or rather teen) will be embarrassed and angry after the invasion of "their space", but remember, they are the child and you, as the parent, have to be an adult and confront issues that make everyone uncomfortable.
And these awesome parents are doing just that.
So instead of shaking your head in wonder of how a parent could do such an invasive thing, I tell you to back off. The kids are only using a room that belongs to the parent. And these parents care enough about their child/teen to confront and deal with the problem hopefully in the early stages of addiction and abuse before there is no real comeback.
“It’s just a tool that parents can use to x-ray into their kid’s room and see what’s going on in a non-invasive way,” said Mark Haines, the owner of K-9 Force Security, a new company based in Ft. Collins.
Along with Storm, his two-year old German Shepard puppy, Haines offers parents the services of a drug-sniffing dog for a fee.
“Given a choice between dealing with the issue head on and honestly with your child, versus waiting two or three years down the road — dealing with addiction, maybe jail time, maybe worse… I’m choosing the drug search every time,” Haines said.
Storm has been trained to detect six major drugs, including marijuana, cocaine, methamphetamine, ecstasy, heroin, psilocybin mushrooms, and even some opiate-based medications like OxyContin.
“It’s not very often that I get to train a dog as sociable as Storm,” said Joe Clingan, who has trained roughly 600 K-9 teams over a nearly 40-year career. He helped bring Storm up to speed. “He’s very direct and very methodical and accurate.”
When Storm enters a home, Haines guides him around, using the command “find the dope.” Once Storm sniffs out a narcotic, he simply sits down, looks at his trainer, and waits for a treat.
“Law enforcement is just overbooked,” Clingan said. “They’re busy, they can’t take the time out to go to an individual’s home and do a drug search.”
Haines says he initially began K-9 Force Security as a way to help employers keep their businesses drug-free. But after an employee at an office he searched saw what Storm could do, she gave him a call.
“I had just noticed some changes in my teenaged son’s behavior and moods,” said the client, who did not want to be identified.
She says Storm found drug paraphernalia inside her home, confirming suspicions about her son using drugs.
“At first of course, (my son) was just irritated and angry with us, but now he’s adjusting well to it,” said the client. “He’s got a better attitude, his grades are improving, so obviously, things are looking up for him.”
“John,” another of Mark’s clients who did not want to be identified, says he was hesitant to hire a drug sniffing dog because it seemed like a drastic and invasive step — until he saw the results.
“I was having some concerns with one of my children, and I didn’t exactly know how to approach it,” said John. “But when the dog actually alerted, it all made sense… It opened a door to where I had some credibility in what I was actually talking about, so it’s just been wonderful since.”
“If one of Storm’s searches is able to help a parent get their kid off drugs,” said Haines, “then that’s a good day’s work.”
In case you’re interested in hiring Mark and Storm — call (970) 373-9935 or visit their website.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
Okay... my thoughts.
What Great Freaking Parents Are These!!!
You're a parent who suspects that your child has a drug or alcohol use/abuse problem. Instead of pretending that you're not seeing the signs, like grades dropping - being more anti-social at home - bloodshot eyes - slurred speech - belligerent over everything - you get proactive and check it out. It is hard to find hidden stashes.
Not all of the drugs are in the backpacks or a cigar box full of stuff under the bed. Kids can get very sneaky in hiding items they don't want their parents to know about.
Instead of waiting until the child hits bottom, or dies, the parents that hire the drug sniffing dog is actively confirming either their child is using drugs or is not. Yes, the child (or rather teen) will be embarrassed and angry after the invasion of "their space", but remember, they are the child and you, as the parent, have to be an adult and confront issues that make everyone uncomfortable.
And these awesome parents are doing just that.
So instead of shaking your head in wonder of how a parent could do such an invasive thing, I tell you to back off. The kids are only using a room that belongs to the parent. And these parents care enough about their child/teen to confront and deal with the problem hopefully in the early stages of addiction and abuse before there is no real comeback.
Monday, February 25, 2013
A&E Show "Panic 9-1-1"
I can't take credit for bringing this to anyone's attention. Reader Conceita sent me the information back in November. Sorry Conceita it took me so long to acknowledge. A&E PRESENTS THE NEW ORIGINAL REAL LIFE SERIES "PANIC 9-1-1" TRUE CRIME THRILLER FOLLOWS REAL 9-1-1 CALLS THREE ONE-HOUR EPISODES PREMIERE THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 29 AT 10PM ET/PT
New York, NY - November 12, 2012 - A&E takes 9-1-1 calls to a whole new level in the new original real life series "PANIC 9-1-1." Using audio from real 9-1-1 calls to narrate the story, "PANIC 9-1-1" lets viewers experience every harrowing and terrifying moment of the callers' ordeals. Three one-hour episodes begin Thursday, November 29 at 10PM ET/PT.
More than half a million 9-1-1 calls are made every day in the U.S. For many, the dispatcher is the only link between life and death. One part thriller and one part true-crime show, each episode of "PANIC 9-1-1" features audio from real, urgent 9-1-1 calls between emergency dispatchers and frantic callers as life-and-death situations unfold around them in real time. Each call is a race against time where every second counts and getting the right details is crucial. Enhanced by stylized recreations and interviews with witnesses, officers, call dispatchers and, in some cases, the callers themselves, "PANIC 9-1-1" keeps the viewer guessing until the last second. Who lives and who dies remains a mystery until the very end.
In the premiere episode of "PANIC 9-1-1," emergency dispatchers in California receive an urgent call from a terrified single mother reporting an unknown intruder in her home. In Illinois, a lone gunman begins shooting a gun in a sporting goods store, and the store's manager must choose whether to flee the scene or stay on the line in order to save those around him. On a dark night in Oklahoma, a grandmother faces the grim possibility of using deadly force to protect herself from an intruder while she waits for police to arrive on the scene.
"PANIC 9-1-1" is produced for A&E Network by Sirens Media. Executive producers for Sirens Media are Valerie Haselton Drescher and Rebecca Toth Diefenbach. Anne S. Rothwell is co-executive producer. Executive producers for A&E are David McKillop, Elaine Frontain Bryant and Brad Holcman.
* * * * * * * * *
Okay, advertisement is over. Now the reason for this post.
Shortly after I read Conceita's comment to me, that the show sounds interesting and promising, I saw a commercial for the upcoming show. They played a part of a taped 9-1-1 call. And I got physically ill.
There are a couple shows on A&E my husband likes to watch. So the channel is on the home television with some regularity (not as much as the History Channel, but regularly). Whenever the commercial comes on, I change the channel.
Naturally, I had to start analyzing why I was feeling this way. On just a commercial.
Yes, I am sure some of it is my PTSD. Even though I haven't seen a commercial for awhile, it took me three months just to write about it. And my stomach is churning and I see my legs are a bit restless.
Just the first commercial brought back memories of some horrific calls I have taken over the years. My first thought was not, "Oh, do I have a call (or two) that might interest you, A&E". No, my first thought was, "I'm gonna be sick."
I am glad that the media is showing the general citizenry a piece of what our work lives are like. I haven't seen a single show, but I really hope they are able to educate people about the stress these calls bring to the dispatcher. And how little support and assistance is given to the dispatcher who is an auditory witness to life at its worst and at death.
"Over half a million 9-1-1 calls are made every day in the U.S. For many, the dispatcher is the only link between life and death."
I wish our Supervisors and Brass would sit up and take notice of that statistic and fact. Yes, many of those half a million plus 9-1-1 calls are not an emergency. But they can be wearing. Especially when it truly is life and death.
And WE DISPATCHERS are the first and major link to getting help to the citizen calling and the officer responding to the call for help.
I hope A&E Producers of "Panic 9-1-1" truly highlight the facts of our job and not just sensationalize the trauma and drama of the calls AND not focus so much of the officers response but puts the spotlight on the dispatcher who made the intelligent and fast and sharp and perceptive decisions to answer the call for help.
New York, NY - November 12, 2012 - A&E takes 9-1-1 calls to a whole new level in the new original real life series "PANIC 9-1-1." Using audio from real 9-1-1 calls to narrate the story, "PANIC 9-1-1" lets viewers experience every harrowing and terrifying moment of the callers' ordeals. Three one-hour episodes begin Thursday, November 29 at 10PM ET/PT.
More than half a million 9-1-1 calls are made every day in the U.S. For many, the dispatcher is the only link between life and death. One part thriller and one part true-crime show, each episode of "PANIC 9-1-1" features audio from real, urgent 9-1-1 calls between emergency dispatchers and frantic callers as life-and-death situations unfold around them in real time. Each call is a race against time where every second counts and getting the right details is crucial. Enhanced by stylized recreations and interviews with witnesses, officers, call dispatchers and, in some cases, the callers themselves, "PANIC 9-1-1" keeps the viewer guessing until the last second. Who lives and who dies remains a mystery until the very end.
In the premiere episode of "PANIC 9-1-1," emergency dispatchers in California receive an urgent call from a terrified single mother reporting an unknown intruder in her home. In Illinois, a lone gunman begins shooting a gun in a sporting goods store, and the store's manager must choose whether to flee the scene or stay on the line in order to save those around him. On a dark night in Oklahoma, a grandmother faces the grim possibility of using deadly force to protect herself from an intruder while she waits for police to arrive on the scene.
"PANIC 9-1-1" is produced for A&E Network by Sirens Media. Executive producers for Sirens Media are Valerie Haselton Drescher and Rebecca Toth Diefenbach. Anne S. Rothwell is co-executive producer. Executive producers for A&E are David McKillop, Elaine Frontain Bryant and Brad Holcman.
* * * * * * * * *
Okay, advertisement is over. Now the reason for this post.
Shortly after I read Conceita's comment to me, that the show sounds interesting and promising, I saw a commercial for the upcoming show. They played a part of a taped 9-1-1 call. And I got physically ill.
There are a couple shows on A&E my husband likes to watch. So the channel is on the home television with some regularity (not as much as the History Channel, but regularly). Whenever the commercial comes on, I change the channel.
Naturally, I had to start analyzing why I was feeling this way. On just a commercial.
Yes, I am sure some of it is my PTSD. Even though I haven't seen a commercial for awhile, it took me three months just to write about it. And my stomach is churning and I see my legs are a bit restless.
Just the first commercial brought back memories of some horrific calls I have taken over the years. My first thought was not, "Oh, do I have a call (or two) that might interest you, A&E". No, my first thought was, "I'm gonna be sick."
I am glad that the media is showing the general citizenry a piece of what our work lives are like. I haven't seen a single show, but I really hope they are able to educate people about the stress these calls bring to the dispatcher. And how little support and assistance is given to the dispatcher who is an auditory witness to life at its worst and at death.
"Over half a million 9-1-1 calls are made every day in the U.S. For many, the dispatcher is the only link between life and death."
I wish our Supervisors and Brass would sit up and take notice of that statistic and fact. Yes, many of those half a million plus 9-1-1 calls are not an emergency. But they can be wearing. Especially when it truly is life and death.
And WE DISPATCHERS are the first and major link to getting help to the citizen calling and the officer responding to the call for help.
I hope A&E Producers of "Panic 9-1-1" truly highlight the facts of our job and not just sensationalize the trauma and drama of the calls AND not focus so much of the officers response but puts the spotlight on the dispatcher who made the intelligent and fast and sharp and perceptive decisions to answer the call for help.
Tuesday, February 19, 2013
Over Time / OT
Yes, something we've all dealt with. Sometimes it is voluntary. Many times it is not.
At my old agency, there was tons of it. Usually worked 45 hours a week, minimum. Hardly ever worked only 40 hours. Anything less than 45 hours of trauma and drama was a light week. By contract we were limited to a top of 60 hours of hard labor (my words, not the MOU) a week. Can't remember how many of those I worked. Simply, too many.
But, at my new agency, I typically work a 40 hour week. Rarely work 44 hours. But.... the last few weeks, due to illnesses and vacations and jury duty, I have worked 48-52 hours.
And boy, am I feeling it!
I have gotten very spoiled with the 40 hour work week. I miss my 4/10 work schedule, but really enjoying a regular sized work week.
But the 44 hour work week three weeks ago, 52 hour week two weeks ago, 44 hours last week, and 48 hours this week (so far), I am exhausted! And the headaches are back.
At my old agency I really developed a headache problem. Probably from working as many hours as I did. Plus, I needed glasses. (Vanity issue, yes) But I don't remember feeling quite as exhausted as I have the last few weeks.
-No comments from the peanut gallery that I am older now and thus more likely to get tired more easily.-
I just know that after two years of working for a smaller agency, and not dealing with all the overtime on a weekly basis, I got very comfortable with my 40 hour work week.
And really complaining because I'm not working a 40 hours work week.
Sheesh. I need to get a life.
At my old agency, there was tons of it. Usually worked 45 hours a week, minimum. Hardly ever worked only 40 hours. Anything less than 45 hours of trauma and drama was a light week. By contract we were limited to a top of 60 hours of hard labor (my words, not the MOU) a week. Can't remember how many of those I worked. Simply, too many.
But, at my new agency, I typically work a 40 hour week. Rarely work 44 hours. But.... the last few weeks, due to illnesses and vacations and jury duty, I have worked 48-52 hours.
And boy, am I feeling it!
I have gotten very spoiled with the 40 hour work week. I miss my 4/10 work schedule, but really enjoying a regular sized work week.
But the 44 hour work week three weeks ago, 52 hour week two weeks ago, 44 hours last week, and 48 hours this week (so far), I am exhausted! And the headaches are back.
At my old agency I really developed a headache problem. Probably from working as many hours as I did. Plus, I needed glasses. (Vanity issue, yes) But I don't remember feeling quite as exhausted as I have the last few weeks.
-No comments from the peanut gallery that I am older now and thus more likely to get tired more easily.-
I just know that after two years of working for a smaller agency, and not dealing with all the overtime on a weekly basis, I got very comfortable with my 40 hour work week.
And really complaining because I'm not working a 40 hours work week.
Sheesh. I need to get a life.
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The Huffington Post | By Rebecca Klein
Posted: 09/19/2013