DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

LA’s 911 system on brink of collapse as outrageous number of calls miss even the minimum standard

April 28, 2026
in News
LA’s 911 system on brink of collapse as outrageous number of calls miss even the minimum standard

As first responders struggle to answer 911 calls quickly amid staffing shortages, operators are pleading with Los Angeles City Hall for more funding.

As the city continues budget hearings to lock in its 2026–27 spending plan, AFSCME, the civilian union representing dispatchers, had a blunt message during a hearing Monday — fund the jobs that matter, the ones that answer the call for help.

“If nobody’s answering the phone, nobody’s coming,” Larry Gates, president of AFSCME told The California Post.

It’s a warning aimed at a system stretched thin, where every missed call and vacancy adds pressure to a lifeline millions rely on.

Police car with flashing red and blue emergency lights at night on a highway.
First responders rely on 911 operators to route police, fire, and medical help, a system under strain as call volumes rise. PhotoSpirit – stock.adobe.com

In Los Angeles, 911 calls are routed through the LAPD Metropolitan Communications Dispatch Center, where more than 500 civilian dispatchers — known as Police Service Representatives — handle a relentless call volume, often taking 75 to 250 calls per shift.

Staffing shortages have been flagged for years in council motions and internal reports, with officials repeatedly tying delays in answering calls to a lack of trained dispatchers.

The city hired 144 dispatcher trainees in 2024, but just 56 in 2025. At the same time, 75 operators left their positions, leaving the department with fewer experienced workers than it started with.

Police officers in a 911 emergency response call center.
Inside the LAPD communications center, civilian dispatchers field hundreds of emergency calls per shift. Taras Vykhopen – stock.adobe.com

“Every 30 years, we’re scrambling,” Gates said. “We do a big hiring push, then decades later everyone retires at once.”

In a city of nearly 4 million people, officials say about 100 operators must be on duty across a 24-hour period just to meet minimum standards.

In 2024, Los Angeles answered just over half of its 911 calls within 15 seconds, far short of the state requirement that 90% be picked up that quickly.

A close-up of a police car with
In Los Angeles, every emergency call is routed through a strained communications system. Christopher Sadowski

“They’re as bad as you would think,” Gates said of emergency calls. “Murders, assaults, you name it. We get those calls.” Those high-stakes emergencies are mixed with a constant flood of lower-level calls, parking disputes, noise complaints, minor crashes, all entering the same system.

Every call first goes through a primary 911 operator, who must quickly determine whether it is a life-threatening situation. If it’s not, it gets pushed to a secondary, non-emergency queue — where a backlog builds.

Non-emergency calls can sit unanswered for long stretches, with average hold times topping three minutes — and far longer in extreme cases — because operators are tied up handling immediate emergencies.

Two police cruisers parked in front of a white house.
Dispatch operators triage incidents ranging from violent crimes to medical emergencies and fires. lawcain – stock.adobe.com

Aaron Peardon, a business representative with District Council 36, said the issue also comes down to how the city values these roles. “The civilian side is the backbone.”

“You’re taking the worst call of someone’s life,” Peardon said. “Then you have to go to the next one.”

Peardon also added that this kind of work should not be automated.

“You want a human being on the line,” Peardon said. “Someone who can react and understand what’s really happening.”

City budget hearings are expected to continue through mid-May, when the Budget and Finance Committee finalizes its recommendations. The full City Council will then vote on a final spending package.


Download The California Post App, follow us on social, and subscribe to our newsletters

California Post News: Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, X, YouTube, WhatsApp, LinkedIn California Post Sports Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, YouTube, X California Post Opinion California Post Newsletters: Sign up here! California Post App: Download here! Home delivery: Sign up here!Page Six Hollywood: Sign up here!


The post LA’s 911 system on brink of collapse as outrageous number of calls miss even the minimum standard appeared first on New York Post.

Skims cofounder Emma Grede says working from home is ‘career suicide’
News

Skims cofounder Emma Grede says working from home is ‘career suicide’

by Business Insider
April 28, 2026

Skims cofounder Emma Grede says remote work could be contributing to wider social issues that many people ignore. Craig Barritt/Getty ...

Read more
News

Weird Things Happen When You Give AI Agents Money and Let Them Spend It

April 28, 2026
News

Daily Horoscope: April 28, 2026

April 28, 2026
News

Replit’s CEO says it’s dumb to study computer science thinking you can make a ‘boatload’ at Google

April 28, 2026
News

Karen Bass Trails LA Mayoral Competitors in 2026 Campaign Fundraising

April 28, 2026
Siblings lose parents in ‘devastating act of violence’; authorities investigate Baldwin Park shooting

Siblings lose parents in ‘devastating act of violence’; authorities investigate Baldwin Park shooting

April 28, 2026
‘They Said A.I. Saved Me’: How South Korea Is Checking on Its Seniors

‘They Said A.I. Saved Me’: How South Korea Is Checking on Its Seniors

April 28, 2026
A warning about the ‘billionaire tax’ — from 200 years ago

A warning about the ‘billionaire tax’ — from 200 years ago

April 28, 2026

DNYUZ © 2026

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2026