The Communications Center responds to emergency and non-emergency calls and other requests for service 24-hours a day, seven days a week. Effective communications support is essential for the management of patrol, investigative and planning functions of the department.
Response time reports, call activity, incident frequencies, crime analysis data and operations reports depend on information derived from the calls for service. This Unit is the department’s first point of contact for local, state, and national disasters and monitors / responds accordingly using various broadcasting and alerting systems.
The Communications Center monitors after-hours courthouse security and provides dispatch support to US Forest Service law enforcement officers.
As the hub for Sheriff's Office and contract dispatch communication services, Communications Officers conduct initial assessment of requests and apply guidelines that screen the nature and urgency of incoming calls. The guidelines are a reflection of the Sheriff's policy, developed through a strategic plan and a balancing of resources, requiring uniform public safety access in unincorporated Lane County.
This "triage" results in a prioritization of those requests. Many services previously associated with the Sheriff's patrol function have been reduced through budget processes. The Sheriff's Office focus has, by necessity, become directed at emergency or immediate life threatening incidents. Property crime and social nuisance issues, while still important in the Sheriff's Office service profile, will be deferred based on the ability to send a deputy to the problem.
As continuing social issues impact government, the Sheriff's Command group will be required to adjust response protocols that will impact service levels.