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Oliver graduates Public Safety Dispatch Academy Class

Richmond, KY - Twenty-four law enforcement dispatchers graduated Friday from the Public Safety Dispatch Academy at the Kentucky Department of Criminal Justice Training, including Katie Oliver, with the Burkesville Police Department.

The graduates hail from communications centers across the state, and comprise DOCJT's 129th telecommunications academy class, which first began in 1999.

The students graduating from the Public Safety Dispatch Academy represent the successful completion of a highly structured and comprehensive curriculum. The five weeks of training consisted of 205 hours of academy instruction to satisfy mandated training requirements.



Major training areas included identifying the role and responsibilities of the dispatcher, correct phone and radio procedures, handling emergency and non-emergency calls for service, emergency medical dispatch protocols and use of the state and national criminal databases.

This class included seven trainees of distinction. To earn this recognition, a student must not fail any tested area, not receive any disciplinary action, earn an evaluation rating of acceptable in every observed category and score an average of 95 percent or higher on all academic tests. Students who achieve this distinction are given a special academy pin to wear on their uniforms.

Additionally, Hopkinsville Police Dispatcher Sarah Adel Carson received the academic achievement award. Dispatch basic training is mandatory for any sworn or civilian employee who will dispatch law enforcement officers by radio at a Criminal Justice Information Systems agency. DOCJT also provides in-service and leadership training for Kentucky public safety dispatchers and law enforcement officers.

DOCJT is a state agency located on Eastern Kentucky University's campus. The agency is the first in the nation to be accredited under the Commission on Accreditation for Law Enforcement Agencies' public safety training program designation. DOCJT also earned accreditation through the International Association for Continuing Education and Training in 2013.

Class 129 graduates and their agencies are:
  • Destiny Anderson, Bluegrass 911 Central Communications
  • Sylvia A. Black, Paris Police Department
  • Erica Vilmita Blake, Carrollton Police Department
  • Samantha J. Burdine, Pulaski County 911 Center
  • Sarah Adel Carson, Hopkinsville Police Department, (Trainee of Distinction)
  • Penny Doyle, Bracken County 911
  • McKenzie Paige Duncan, Logan County E.C.C.
  • Dakota Annie Noel Farrington, Georgetown Police Department
  • Kathaleen G. Fraley, Providence 911 Dispatch, (Trainee of Distinction)
  • Deanna L. Frizzell, McLean County Sheriff's Office
  • Rabon Curtis Goble, Martin County 911, (Trainee of Distinction)
  • Casey M. Guidi, Whitley County Communications, (Trainee of Distinction)
  • Brent E. Hughes, Paintsville/Johnson County 911
  • Charles J. Mahan, Jessamine County E-911, (Trainee of Distinction)
  • Brianna Marshall, Shelby County 911
  • Tori Lee McDonald, Logan County E.C.C.
  • Katie Oliver, Burkesville Police Department
  • Michael Todd Ritchie, Hazard Police Department
  • Samuel Shoup, Boone County Public Safety Center, (Trainee of Distinction)
  • Seth Stanley, Carter County 911
  • Lindsey Kathryn Swisher Steward, Jessamine County E-911
  • Gina L. Vergason, Hancock County 911
  • Shelby Raye Wallace, Morehead State University Police Department
  • Anne Clinton Wooster, Lexington Enhanced 911, (Trainee of Distinction)


This story was posted on 2019-11-24 09:11:08
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