On Steve Summers' program this morning, he played a tape of a woman calling for police that was quite insulting to the woman. Here is some of what it said.

She had two daughters ages 12 and 14 who were fighting violantly. The younger one, the woman described as being as big as she was, so she could not stop the fight, and decided to have police intervene. She called emergency services. The call taker while reviewing the event said "do you want us to shoot them?" The woman immediatly told the man she felt that was not funny. He replied with the fact is was a joke. She asked his name and threatened to file a complaint. The man appologized, and went on. He then placed her on hold (time on hold was not clear but appeared to be quite short), then reviewed again. He summerized the ages and the event. The woman was adigtated at the fact he did not remember facts. He then told her police were on an "emergency" call and advised her he would dispatch them as soon as he could. She wanted them right then and not "as soon as he could."

Based on what I have said, what do you think of this call? What would you do?

Being in the postion of a call center employee, now and in the past, I will say this from an inside point of view.

The man was probably out of line with the joke, but he appologized. That should have been enough. He was only trying to ease the woman.

Call centers have policies and procedures. If the employee does not follow them, they can be fired. They must use "required dialouge," required procedures, and other things by company policy. If the call center says he must rephrase the event, then he must rephrase the event. He was only trying to make sure he had the facts correct.

Police have priorities. This call was probably a priority two call, which means it is placed behind events like armed robbery, homicide, and similar events. He should have told the woman the call they were on, and told her they would be dispatched. She probably still would not understand because most people do not understand jurisdictional boundries or call priority.

In short, I feel both parties were out of line. More the caller than the call taker. At least he appologized.