No Point In Calling 911 In This City

Written By BlabberBuzz | Wednesday, 15 September 2021 01:15 AM
12
Views 12.5K

Portland residents calling 911 for emergencies will see a dramatic increase in hold times, with officials saying that the system is "broken."

According to The Oregonian, starting in the late spring, the riot-gripped city has suffered a clear increase in 911 calls placed on hold for two minutes or more.

The national standard for 911 hold times is 15 to 20 seconds, but according to data from the Portland Bureau of Emergency Communications received by The Oregonian, 574 of the 911 calls in the city had to wait on hold for more than five minutes in July. This number is more than double that of May, in which 221 calls waited that long, and is exceptionally more than the amount in March, when only eight 911 calls took more than five minutes to answer.

Bob Cozzie, director of Portland's Bureau of Emergency Communications, said, "I think it's horrible. There's no other way to state it," in regards to the dramatic jump in wait times. "We're at a tipping point now. It's become unmanageable," he said, acknowledging the delay. "The system is broken."

 WATCH TRUMP: EUROPE HAS OPENED IT'S DOORS TO JIHADbell_image

Cozzie noted that a significant increase in the volume of 911 and non-emergency calls that his department receives, as well as a staffing shortage, were adding to the hold time increase. "Compared to a year ago, the bureau has experienced a 20 percent to 45 percent increase in 911 calls so far this year depending on the week," wrote The Oregonian. In July, residents made 63,573 calls to 911, drawing a 22 percent jump from July of 2020. 911 calls in July 2020 represented only a 2 percent increase over July 2019.

 WATCH DUKE PROFESSOR: STUDENTS VIEWING THE WORLD AS OPPRESSOR VS. OPPRESSEDbell_image

On Sept. 4 during a shootout at a Pearl District restaurant, callers had to wait more than 7.5 minutes before a dispatcher answered.

The rise in both the number of calls to 911, and the longer hold times, comes as the city undergoes an increase in homicides.

 KEVIN SPACEY'S DARK SECRETS EXPOSED IN NEW DOCUMENTARY SERIESbell_image

According to the Portland Police Bureau, between January and July 2021, 52 people have died in homicides in Portland. During the same period last year, just 26 people died as a result of homicides.

The surge in violence also comes as the city faces leavings of a portion of its law enforcement officers amid attempts to defund the police. In June, all officers on the Rapid Response Team, which responds to riots, civil unrest, and rallies like many of which have troubled the city for over a year, resigned from their posts.

X