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0000017c-5ad9-ded9-afff-7bdfe2e40000Each year, KUNR works with the NPR Next Generation Radio program and the Reynolds School of Journalism to train some of the brightest college reporters on multimedia storytelling. This year’s theme for the program is “Overnight Stories from Reno.”

The Voice You Hear On Your Worst Day

A close-up of a green t-shirt with a logo reading "RENO DISPATCH" in gold and white letters. Below the lettering, are two circular gold embloms, one with a flame inside and the other with a shield.
Karina Gonzalez

Have you ever wondered about the voice on the other end of a 911 call? Melissa Beltron is a public safety dispatcher in Washoe County trained to keep calm under pressure, but there are certain phone calls she says she can never forget. Students at the Reynolds School of Journalism joined Beltron for her overnight shift in order to share her story.

No one calls 911 when they are having a good day.

Melissa Beltron, 29, has been a public safety dispatcher in Reno, NV for two years. Growing up with parents who worked as deputies in northern Nevada, Beltron always imagined she would pursue a different career.

As a child, she says her parents discussed the difficult situations they encountered, including cases about child abuse. These conversations made Beltron more skeptical and distrustful of her surroundings.

“I probably knew too many things about what was happening based on where they worked,” said Beltron.

As a mother to a six-year-old daughter, she said she is cautious about who she entrusts to take care of her child. She constantly reminds her daughter to memorize her address and phone number in case of emergencies.

Beltron recalled a time when she worked in public records and had to register a sex offender who she said looked like a “cute little old man.”

“It was kind of one of those things that was very jarring to see the person and not think that they were, you know, they look nice,” said Beltron.

After working in public records for over a year, Beltron realized she needed a change of pace and decided to become a dispatcher.

Training for the City of Reno is 18 months, with dispatchers switching shifts every four to six weeks, including graveyard and swing shifts.

A photo of a smiling woman with dark hair, sitting turned around at a desk with computers.
Credit Karina Gonzalez
Melissa Beltron, 29, sits in front of a desk where she takes calls from the Reno Police Department. Photo by Karina Gonzalez.

Melissa now works from 7 p.m. to 5 a.m. Friday through Monday at the Regional Emergency Operations Center for Washoe County. Agencies within the dispatch center include the Washoe County Sheriff’s Office, Truckee Meadows Fire, City of Reno Police Department, City of Reno Fire Department among others. Beltron switches every two hours throughout the night between various Reno agencies within the dispatch center.

Erin Yeung, the public safety dispatch supervisor, estimates that the Regional Emergency Operations Center receives on average of 500,000 phone calls per year.

Though Beltron prides herself on being calm and composed on the job, there are two calls she says she’ll never forget. The first involved a hysterical person who had just discovered a family member who harmed themself.

“There was another time when children were locked in a closet because of a domestic dispute and they were calling, and it was an older teenager with a younger toddler aged [child],” Beltron explained. “I had like a proud-mama moment for that teenager because she did everything she could do to keep that kid stuck in that closet to keep her safe, and it was just something that you can't not have a feeling about.”

Beltron said she compartmentalizes her emotions to be able to take multiple calls at a time, fact-check and distribute the information police officers need to help people, as well as stay safe in the field.

“There's times where I haven't slept and I've had a stressful night and my reaction to a normal question is very short and curt and not nice, and then you kind of have to reel it back in and say, ‘Hey, I had a bad night,’ maybe not explain everything but say ‘I took this phone call and it really hurt my feelings or made me emotional and I don't really want to have contact with people’," said Beltron.

In a 2018 study by the Society for Police and Criminal Psychology, researchers found that “dispatchers experience occupational stress, psychological distress, and sub-threshold PTSD at similar or higher rates compared to police officers.”

Beltron said due to the intensity of her job, she prioritizes her time outside of work.

“I would rather be at home with my family than hangout with a bunch of people,” Beltron said. “I never want to talk on the phone ever again.”

A close-up photo of a desk with a person typing on a keyboard in front of a computer screen.
Credit Karina Gonzalez
Dispatchers are constantly receiving information through the radios or phones, so they have to listen attentively and type everything they hear accurately.

Beltron describes the dispatch environment as a “dysfunctional family,” with people shouting across the room to help each other on difficult or complex calls.

Prior to this job, Beltron said she didn’t feel fulfilled and hopes she can contribute to society in a meaningful way.

“We want to help you. We have this job for a reason,” said Beltron. “We have to have some kind of empathy or sympathy for people because otherwise we couldn't do this job as effectively.”

This story was produced by Karina Gonzalez, a senior at the Reynolds School of Journalism and a bilingual reporter for KUNR. She participated in the NPR Next Generation Radio program and says this experience opened her eyes to what it’s really like in an emergency call center.

Karina’s work is part of a series called “Overnight Stories from Reno.”

Karina Gonzalez is a first-generation college student from Elk Grove, CA studying journalism and political science at the University of Nevada, Reno. Karina is committed to honing her reporting skills and telling stories in a way that is engaging and effective across digital platforms.
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