Current through Register Vol. 56, No. 18, September 16, 2024
(a) Each PSAP shall
be staffed 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
(b) Each PSAP shall, at all times, be staffed
with the number of call-takers necessary to permit the PSAP to answer all calls
within 10 seconds, except that during the average busiest hour 10 percent of
the calls may be answered within 20 seconds.
(c) Each call-taker and dispatcher position
in a PSAP, except as provided in (d) below, shall be staffed by a person
certified by OETS as qualified on the basis of the following:
1. Current certification in a Basic Training
Course approved by the Commission consisting of either:
i. A Basic Training Course approved by the
Commission, which shall include, but not be limited to, the following topics:
(1) Interpersonal Communications;
(2) Telecommunicator Role in Public
Safety;
(3) Overview of the Police
Function;
(4) Overview of the Fire
Function;
(5) Overview of the EMS
Function;
(6) Public Safety
Telecommunications Systems;
(7)
Radio Broadcasting Rules and Procedures;
(8) Public Safety Records Systems;
(9) Telephone Techniques;
(10) Enhanced 9-1-1 Systems and Operating
Procedures; and
(11)
Telecommunicator Legal Issues; or
ii. Past certification in the APCO Institute
24 Hour Public Safety Telecommunicator Basic Training Course for New Jersey,
which was a course developed by the Associated Public Safety Communications
Officers' Institute that was adapted to provide training in unique features of
the New Jersey 9-1-1 emergency enhanced telecommunications network and system
and was approved by OETS, if the call-taker either:
(1) Demonstrated to OETS that he or she has
had 320 hours of work experience as a call-taker or public safety dispatcher in
a local emergency telecommunications center in New Jersey prior to the local
center's implementation of the 9-1-1 system; or
(2) Obtained a determination from OETS that a
public safety telecommunicators basic training course, which the person had
successfully completed, provided training that, when supplemented with the APCO
Institute 24 Hour Public Safety Telecommunicator Basic Training Course for New
Jersey, will be substantially equivalent to the APCO Institute 40 Hour Public
Safety Telecommunicator Basic Training Course for New Jersey;
2. Successful
completion of annual in-service training during each year of service following
initial certification, consisting of an 8-hour program developed by the local
PSAP and approved by OETS to address technical developments and improve the
provision of 9-1-1 services;
3.
Except for a call-taker or dispatcher in a PSAP that directly transfers
emergency medical service calls to another agency that is staffed by emergency
medical PSDP personnel who meet the requirements of this paragraph and (c)4
below, current certification CPR training approved by the New Jersey Department
of Health and Senior Services;
4.
Except for a call-taker or dispatcher in a PSAP that directly transfers
emergency medical service calls to another agency that is staffed by emergency
medical PSDP personnel who meet the requirements of this paragraph and (c)3
above, and unless the person meets the requirements of (c)1ii(1) above, current
certification in an Emergency Medical Dispatch Training Course approved by the
Commission which utilizes Emergency Medical Dispatch Guidecards approved by the
New Jersey State Department of Health and Senior Services, Office of Emergency
Medical Services, meets ASTM Standard F 1552-94, and follows the National
Highway Traffic Safety Administration, Emergency Medical Dispatch, National
Standard Curriculum; and
5. Except
for a call-taker or dispatcher in a PSAP that directly transfers emergency
medical service calls to another agency that is staffed by emergency medical
PSDP personnel who meet the requirements of (c)3 and 4 above, call-takers and
dispatchers who meet the requirements of (c)1ii(1) above shall:
i. Become certified, prior to December 2002,
in a 24 Hour Emergency Medical Dispatch Training Course approved by the
Commission specifically for individuals meeting the requirement of (c)1ii(1)
above which utilizes Emergency Medical Dispatch Guidecards approved by the New
Jersey State Department of Health and Senior Services, meets ASTM Standard F
1552-94, and follows the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration,
Emergency Medical Dispatch, National Standard Curriculum; and
ii. Shall be exempt from the requirement of
(c)2 above from the date of completing the training required in (c)5i above
until December 2003.
(d) Persons who are not certified as provided
in (c) above may be utilized to substitute for a certified call-taker or
dispatcher under the following circumstances:
1. A certified call-taker or dispatcher is
scheduled for duty but unavailable due to illness or an emergency. Substitute
call-takers or dispatchers are not to be used for coverage for meal breaks or
other routine scheduled breaks; and
2. The person is one who meets the following
requirements:
i. Has successfully completed
the U.S. Department of Transportation's "First Responders: Emergency Medical
Care Training Course," or "Crash Injury Management for Traffic Law Enforcement
Officers" or "EMT Course";
ii. Has
a current CPR certification in a program approved by the New Jersey Department
of Health and Senior Services;
iii.
Has successfully completed an eight-hour introductory course on the New Jersey
9-1-1 emergency enhanced telecommunications system which has been prepared by
the local PSAP and approved by OETS; and
iv. Has successfully completed annual
in-service training during each year of service following completion of the
introductory course on the New Jersey 9-1-1 emergency enhanced
telecommunications system, consisting of an eight-hour program developed by the
local PSAP and approved by OETS to address technical developments and improve
the provision of 9-1-1 services.
(e) A PSAP serving a municipality identified
by the most recent census as having a non-English speaking population of
greater than five percent of the population, shall either:
1. Have a language interpreter available at
the PSAP; or
2. Have a language
interpreter immediately available, under contract, by telephone conference
call.
(f) The following
PSAP call-taker and dispatcher training is recommended but not required for
PSAPs that directly transfer emergency medical calls to another agency that is
staffed by emergency medical PSDP personnel who meet the requirements of (c)3
and 4 above:
1. A current AHA, ARC or NSC CPR
certification; and
2. Current
certification in an Emergency Medical Dispatch Course approved by the
Commission which utilizes Emergency Medical Dispatch Guidecards approved by the
New Jersey State Department of Health and Senior Services, Office of Emergency
Medical Services, meets ASTM Standard F 1552-94, and follows the National
Highway Traffic Safety Administration, Emergency Medical Dispatch, National
Standard Curriculum.