Ontario
Halton
Voice dictation system for the submission of police reports to our Records Bureau.
To streamline the creation of police reports by harnessing available technology and reducing the reliance on old inefficient paper-based methods.
Police Resources Integration System Management (PRISM)
Chris Lawsonchris.lawson@haltonpolice.ca
Purchased product.
Since 2010.
An identified need to streamline report generation through the use of available technology.
The voice dictation was approximately $300,000 to purchase and we also pay $20/month to have phones in 120 police cars ($2400/month).
Will be phased in.
An officer can type approximately 20 words per minute but can speak 150 words per minute, so it is significantly less efficient to file a report by typing. We do not use “direct entry”; rather we use voice dictation. Now officers dictate their reports (typically from their notes) either to a recording system or to a live person (depending on the nature of the report). Officers now can submit their reports directly from their patrol vehicles without returning to stations. They are generally able to produce reports in shorter periods of time with significantly less paperwork.Records Bureau staff then retrieve the recorded reports and manually enter them into the records management system. These electronic reports are then made available to a range of parties, including supervisors, for review. Once implemented, the system is largely self sufficient.
Yes
A range of in-house messaging was used.
No
N/A
2013-08-01