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DC Police Install Software For The Deaf Community |
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DC police install software for the deaf community
By NAFEESA SYEED Associated Press Writer
Posted: 06/18/2010 09:33:49 AM PDT
Updated: 06/18/2010 01:19:14 PM PDT
WASHINGTON-Police in the District of Columbia are seeking to improve
communications with the city's large deaf and hard of hearing population
through new software in police cruisers-a move believed to be among the
first nationwide.
The Metropolitan Police Department installed the software in 15 police
cars this week under a pilot program. It provides a video link that
allows people to communicate with police through American Sign Language
interpreters.
Police spokesman Officer Eric Frost said the department already has a
special unit for deaf and hard of hearing residents and officers who
translate sign language. But the software allows officers to gather
information from the scene more rapidly, he said.
"We have a very large deaf and hard of hearing community in this city,"
Frost said. "It's allowing us to serve that community with much more
efficacy and efficiency."
The region is home to Gallaudet University, the nation's premier
university for deaf and hard of hearing students, and thousands of
federal government workers who are deaf.
Fred Weiner, Gallaudet's executive director of program development, said
language and cultural variables can cause communication problems and
misunderstandings, which sometimes lead to unfortunate results or
people's rights being violated. Weiner, who is deaf, said D.C. police
are the first to adopt the software.
"While it does not resolve all the communication issues deaf and hard of
hearing people encounter when interacting with law enforcement
officials, it is a very important step in the right direction," he said
in an e-mail.
Police said three of the cruisers are in the district where Gallaudet is
located. The software also is installed at each of the department's
seven police stations and three substations.
The Rocklin, Calif.-based Purple Communications Inc. did not charge
police for installing the software, according to Paul Singleton,
director of strategic accounts. Singleton said D.C. police are the first
in the nation to use the service in their vehicles.
The software connects an officer's laptop webcam to one of the company's
24-hour ASL interpreters, who then provide police with the translation.
The service also allows deaf people to make phone calls from the scene.
Singleton, who lives in Bethesda, Md., said he has hereditary deafness
and is fourth-generation deaf. There have been emergencies in which he's
had trouble calling police or had problems communicating with
authorities, he said. But new technology is alleviating those obstacles,
he said.
"All those barriers have totally been removed and my options as a deaf
person are unbelievable compared to my grandfather," he said while
communicating via his laptop to an interpreter.
Capt. Edward Delgado, head of the D.C. police special liaison unit, said
the software has already proven successful since it was installed.
Delgado said it helped facilitate the conversation between an officer
responding to a deaf person involved in a traffic accident.
About a month ago, he said officials also installed separate hardware
programs in each police station that allow deaf and hard of hearing
residents to speak with police and other D.C. government agencies.
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