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Most people think they understand 911. They know someone picks up. What they don't know is everything that happens in the seconds after—and that gap, it turns out, costs more than anyone realizes. In this special episode recorded in honor of 911 Education Month, host Lori Henricksen brings together three members of the GovWorks education team—Chief of Public Safety Engagement Tipi Brookins, Director of 911 Education Halcyon Frank, and Manager of Applied 911 Education Michael Mollo—for a panel conversation about why education might be the single most powerful and most underestimated tool in emergency communications.
Tipi says it best: if the public truly understood what telecommunicators do—the split-second decisions, the technical juggling, the weight of being the lifeline between a caller in crisis and a responder heading toward danger—they wouldn't just be less frustrated when they're asked a lot of questions. They'd be in awe. Closing that gap isn't just good community relations. It makes every call go better.
But this episode goes well beyond public awareness. Lori and her guests get into what real professional development looks like for telecommunicators, why the training that actually sticks is never just a checklist, and what happens to good people when agencies stop investing in them after they clear training. The workforce crisis in 911 isn't going to be solved by recruiting alone—and this panel makes a compelling case for what it actually takes to build a profession people choose to stay in.
Each panelist brings a moment that makes it personal. Tipi's memory of guiding a mother through infant CPR on an Amtrak train on what may have been her very first solo call. Halcyon's description of watching the lightbulb turn on for a dispatcher in training. Michael's reminder that every call carries real consequences—for the person taking it and the responders heading out because of it.
The episode ends with a challenge: do something. One post. One community event. One honest conversation with your team. Because as Tipi puts it, education is the liability insurance you can't buy.
If you work in 911—or you care about the people who do—this one is worth your full attention.
Be sure to follow us on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/comms-coach-podcast/
By Comms CoachMost people think they understand 911. They know someone picks up. What they don't know is everything that happens in the seconds after—and that gap, it turns out, costs more than anyone realizes. In this special episode recorded in honor of 911 Education Month, host Lori Henricksen brings together three members of the GovWorks education team—Chief of Public Safety Engagement Tipi Brookins, Director of 911 Education Halcyon Frank, and Manager of Applied 911 Education Michael Mollo—for a panel conversation about why education might be the single most powerful and most underestimated tool in emergency communications.
Tipi says it best: if the public truly understood what telecommunicators do—the split-second decisions, the technical juggling, the weight of being the lifeline between a caller in crisis and a responder heading toward danger—they wouldn't just be less frustrated when they're asked a lot of questions. They'd be in awe. Closing that gap isn't just good community relations. It makes every call go better.
But this episode goes well beyond public awareness. Lori and her guests get into what real professional development looks like for telecommunicators, why the training that actually sticks is never just a checklist, and what happens to good people when agencies stop investing in them after they clear training. The workforce crisis in 911 isn't going to be solved by recruiting alone—and this panel makes a compelling case for what it actually takes to build a profession people choose to stay in.
Each panelist brings a moment that makes it personal. Tipi's memory of guiding a mother through infant CPR on an Amtrak train on what may have been her very first solo call. Halcyon's description of watching the lightbulb turn on for a dispatcher in training. Michael's reminder that every call carries real consequences—for the person taking it and the responders heading out because of it.
The episode ends with a challenge: do something. One post. One community event. One honest conversation with your team. Because as Tipi puts it, education is the liability insurance you can't buy.
If you work in 911—or you care about the people who do—this one is worth your full attention.
Be sure to follow us on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/comms-coach-podcast/