ASTM SAR Committee approves standard for telecommunicators.

Press Release Summary:



Developed by ASTM International Committee F32 on Search and Rescue, ASTM F2662 establishes minimum training standard for general and specific knowledge, skills, and abilities for dispatchers, 911 operators, and telecommunicators to be trained in processing and dispatching of SAR incidents. Committee is seeking SAR personnel and EMS telecommunicators and dispatch personnel interested in working on companion documents, practice guidelines, and call-specific questions guidelines.



Original Press Release:



ASTM Search and Rescue Committee Approves Standard for Telecommunicators



W. CONSHOHOCKEN, Pa., 27 January 2009-The importance of telecommunicators in the search and rescue field cannot be overstated. Dispatchers receiving and delivering accurate information in a timely manner are critical to any SAR operation. A new standard developed by ASTM International Committee F32 on Search and Rescue highlights the importance of proper training for SAR dispatchers.

The standard, ASTM F2662, Guide for Minimum Training of Dispatchers and Telecommunicators of SAR Incidents, is under the jurisdiction of Subcommittee F32.02 on Management and Operations. The standard is an expansion of SAR dispatch guidelines originally developed by the Mountain Rescue Association.

"Now, for the first time, public safety agencies will have a consensus guideline to use that will allow emergency dispatchers, 911 call takers and search and rescue managers to effectively and efficiently triage calls, and to determine the optimal response to people lost or in need of rescue, especially when used in conjunction with the Mountain Rescue Association call-specific question guides," says Timothy Kovacs, operations chief-paramedic, Maricopa County Sheriff's Office Mountain Rescue, and an F32 member.

ASTM F2662 establishes a minimum training standard for general and specific knowledge, skills and abilities for dispatchers, 911 operators and telecommunicators to be trained in the processing and dispatching of potential and actual SAR incidents. Kovacs invites all who work in search and rescue to join in the continuing standards development activities of Subcommittee F32.02. "We are seeking SAR personnel and EMS telecommunicators and dispatch personnel interested in working on companion documents, practice guidelines and call-specific questions guidelines," says Kovacs.

For technical Information, contact Timothy Kovacs, Glendale, Ariz. (phone: 602-819-4066; tkovacs@cox.net). Committee F32 meets May 30 in conjunction with the 2009 National Conference of the National Association for Search and Rescue in Little Rock, Ark.

ASTM International welcomes and encourages participation in the development of its standards. ASTM's open consensus process, using advanced Internet-based standards development tools, ensures worldwide access for all interested individuals. For more information on becoming an ASTM member, please contact Thomas O'Toole, ASTM International (phone: 610-832-9739; totoole@astm.org).

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