RE: [Philmont]: GPS

From: kbarley6 <kbarley6@cox.net>
Date: Tue Feb 07 2006 - 16:44:57 CST

Jim
 
Colorado doesn't have 911 GPS yet? Thought that was mandated as the
E911 program by 2005?
 
Most folks have GPS enabled phones. Not sure all 911 centers can
translate, but they should.
 
Here's who you should contact to press for the service. Seems really
important in your neck of the woods.
 
Colorado

Robert McGuire
Senior Policy Advisor
Office of the Governor
136 State Capital
Denver, CO 80203
P: (303) 866-6380
Robert.mcguire@state.co.us

Deborah M. Tellez, ENP
State-wide PUC 911 Task Force Chairman
Larimer Emergency Telephone Authority
Administrative Assistant
P.O. Box 273060
Fort Collins, CO 80527-3060
DMTELLEZ@aol.com

 
 
Kirk Barley
Virginia Beach

-----Original Message-----
From: owner-philmont@troop47.com [mailto:owner-philmont@troop47.com] On
Behalf Of James H. Moss
Sent: Tuesday, February 07, 2006 11:46 AM
To: Multiple recipients of list philmont
Subject: RE: [Philmont]: GPS

I live in Colorado. Every day we get another story of a tourist using a
cell phone to call for help and because they did not know where they
where, no help was forth coming or drastically delayed. Our cell phone
towers in the mountains, are few and far between, service large areas,
yet service may not be available a hundred yards away. Don't call 911
at Philmont. 911 Dispatch is going to call Philmont or a county SAR is
going to respond. All you are going to do by calling 911 is delay your
response. Even if you know your exact position (GPS) it does not mean
that the person receiving the information can interpret the information.
Philmont maps, if you compare to a USGS map use some different terms to
identify some areas and all trails. Philmont will know where you are
and where you are supposed to be, the 911 operator will not.
 
Calling 911 at Philmont will cost a fortune, not resolve the problem
effectively or timely and probably not get you much of a response. Most
times in Colorado, you are on the phone for minutes being transferred
from dispatch to dispatch till the right dispatcher is found. Out here
we include the direct numbers in our phones if we think we need them
when traveling in the mountains.
 
Besides, caring a cell phone is just carrying a brick. Better to carry
more first aid get and knowledge then to rely on a cell phone. Granted
calling the wife from the top of a mountain might be fun, but do it from
Pike's Peak on your tour.
 
Jim Moss

  _____

From: owner-philmont@troop47.com [mailto:owner-philmont@troop47.com] On
Behalf Of Robert Tuck
Sent: Tuesday, February 07, 2006 4:11 AM
To: Multiple recipients of list philmont
Subject: RE: [Philmont]: GPS

As a Volunteer Firefighter and medical responder, I disagree. Is that
is the only way you can get help, by all means call it. It is correct
to call the Philmont number first. There are a lot of wilderness areas
that cell phones work. A cell phone calls the strongest tower that it
has a signal from. It is always important to know where you are at and
let the dispatcher that you contact know that. I know of a couple of
cases (from personal experience) that 911 was dialed from the center of
a town and the receiving cell tower was located in the next county.
Philmont or not, ALWAYS let the dispatcher know where you are at so that
the appropiate services can respond.. Be specific.

 

 

Robert Tuck

Warner Robins, Georgia

 

 

  _____

From: owner-philmont@troop47.com [mailto:owner-philmont@troop47.com] On
Behalf Of SIHIWI@aol.com
Sent: Monday, February 06, 2006 9:10 PM
To: Multiple recipients of list philmont
Subject: Re: [Philmont]: GPS

 

In a message dated 2/6/2006 11:07:56 A.M. Central Standard Time,
bill55@comcast.net writes:

The ability to "Call 911" is cold comfort when such aid can be hours
away.

NEVER call 911 from Philmont. If you are so inclined to carry a cell
phone, you MUST call only the number they give you at Advisors coffee.
911 can be captured by any number of cells, and will cause many more
problems than solutions. Just thought I would "nip this in the bud."
Not even sure the poster meant to give that impression. My 2 cents.

 

YIP X 7
1993, 1995, 1997, 1999, 2001, 2003, 2005
IWTGBTP (but probably won't be able) ;+(
Steve Unger
T-50, Fort Worth, Texas

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Received on Tue Feb 7 17:39:23 2006

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