Fire chiefs from across Santa Barbara County attended the Nov. 16 Board of Supervisors meeting in support of the regional dispatch center presented by county Fire Chief Mark Hartwig.
āThe story that I will talk about here this morning is more about cooperation, partnership, and regionalization as it is about dispatch,ā Hartwig said. āThis is a culmination of a years-long effort. What I present is the next stepāa big stepābut the next step in this county.āĀ
The recently approved Regional Fire Communications Facility (RFCF) will create one dedicated center for all fire and medical service-related calls, cut jurisdictions, and give dispatchers fire-related expertise, according to previous Sun reporting.Ā

It will cost about $11 million to constructāa cost shared between county and RFCF partnersāthe 8,500-square-foot facility, which will have a new communication center, a joint information center (JIC), a data center, and backup servers, Hartwig noted.Ā
āThere will be two public safety answering pointsāPSAPSāa primary and secondary. The sheriff will continue to operate the primary PSAP, and there will be no impact to the sheriffās ability to operate the primary PSAP, nor would it be negatively affected by loss of space or functionality at the EOC [Emergency Operations Center],ā Hartwig said.Ā
Santa Barbara County Sheriff Bill Brown disagreed.Ā
āThe Sheriffās Office strongly opposes the splitting of 911 dispatch services by creating a regional dispatch center to which 911 calls would have to be transferred. All 911 calls related to fire and emergency medical services would have to be transferred,ā Brown said.Ā
County emergency servicesā 44-year history shows that thereās no need to separate dispatch, Brown said, due to the successful responses to disastrous incidents like the Thomas and Alisal fires, the Refugio oil spill, and the Isla Vista mass shooting.Ā
āHaving all three disciplines in the same room and [being] able to communicate with each other directly, face to faceāand in real timeāprove to be beneficial, and prove to be life saving,ā he said.Ā
It currently takes callers 60 seconds to dispatch emergency services at the call center. Brown argued any transfer to the regional dispatch center will cause responses to take twice as long (about 119 seconds).
In response to the sheriffās comments, Chief Hartwig said transfer delays will occurāwhich would happen anywhereāand the delay would be about eight seconds. He couldnāt say if the delay would be more harmful than that at a non-regionalized facility.Ā
āThis is a very common practice for fire agencies that said, āWe want to do it better together.ā We are not cutting edge, we are not bleeding edge. Secondary PCAPS are numerous in the state of California, specifically for fire, rescue, and emergency medical service providers,ā Hartwig said.Ā
LA County, San Diego County, San Bernardino County, and neighboring Ventura County all follow a regional dispatch model with several agencies involved in each of their corresponding plans, Hartwig said.Ā
Second District Supervisor Gregg Hart appreciated the sheriffās concern but disagreed with his arguments and promoted the collaboration.Ā
āI think that there have been opportunities to do things differently to collaborate; and those opportunities werenāt taken by the sheriffās department, but they were taken by the fire agencies,ā he said. āThatās why every single fire chief is here today in this room in solidarity with this plan.ā
Hart and the rest of the supervisors said they wanted to see this change and believe the dispatch center will benefit county residents as well as allow fire departments to see improvements in response times.Ā
āItās an opportunity to grasp a regional solution to borderless dispatch in the fastest way possible,ā Hart said.
This article appears in Nov 25 – Dec 2, 2021.

