In a 911 center, every word matters.
Emergency telecommunicators must quickly understand what is happening, determine the appropriate response, and relay critical information to field responders — often within seconds.
But those conversations don’t always come clearly or easily.
Callers may speak different languages. Multiple people may call about the same incident at the same time. And in high-stress situations, details can be missed as dispatchers manage multiple calls and coordinate responses.
For the team at Butler County Emergency 9-1-1 in Pennsylvania, technology that improves clarity and situational awareness inside the center can make a meaningful difference in how quickly responders are deployed.
As an early adopter of RapidSOS’s AI-enabled capabilities within the UNITE platform, Butler County has implemented real-time transcription and translation tools designed to support call-takers as they process emergencies.

Inside a busy emergency communications center, call-takers are often handling multiple incidents simultaneously. Traditionally, each call existed primarily between the caller and the telecommunicator answering the phone.
Real-time transcription changes that dynamic.
As calls are processed, the conversation is automatically converted into text that appears within the RapidSOS platform. This allows other personnel inside the center to see the developing situation in real time.
For Butler County, this capability created an unexpected operational advantage.
This shared visibility allows dispatch teams to determine whether multiple callers are reporting the same incident, understand the scope of a developing situation faster, and coordinate resources more efficiently across the center.
Language barriers have long presented challenges for emergency call centers.
Historically, telecommunicators often needed to route calls through third-party interpretation services, adding additional time to already urgent situations.
With RapidSOS’s real-time translation capability, Butler County can now translate incoming calls directly within the platform.
By reducing delays associated with language interpretation, dispatchers can focus on gathering critical information faster and ensuring the appropriate response is sent

While the technology introduces new capabilities, Butler County emphasizes that these tools are designed to support telecommunicators — not replace them.
Instead, AI functions as an additional layer of support.
The system can identify key words or phrases within the conversation — such as “shots fired,” “fire,” or “chest pain” — helping call-takers quickly recognize critical details that may emerge during a fast-moving call.
McLafferty describes the technology in simple terms:
By surfacing critical information and supporting situational awareness across the room, the platform allows dispatchers to focus on what matters most: helping people in crisis.
Every emergency response begins with a call.
The information gathered during that initial conversation becomes the foundation for everything that follows — from dispatching police, fire, or EMS units to ensuring hospitals receive the information they need when patients arrive.
For Butler County, technologies that enhance clarity, visibility, and communication inside the 911 center ultimately support the entire emergency response ecosystem.
As emergency communications centers continue to evolve, tools that help dispatchers process information faster and collaborate more effectively are becoming increasingly valuable.
For Butler County 911, real-time transcription and translation have helped transform how information flows inside the center — turning every call into actionable intelligence that the entire team can see.
And when seconds matter, clarity can make all the difference.

