
Call volumes are increasing. Staffing is tight. And call-takers are feeling burnout.
When emergency call centers are feeling stretched, the answer seems obvious: there are too many calls.
But call volume is not the root cause of the issue.
Conversations across the industry are showing a clear pattern: the centers navigating today's pressure most effectively aren't hiring more or answering fewer calls.
They are redesigning how their systems perform under stress, increasing their capacity to respond and resolve calls.
While it's reasonable to assume that adding staff or shifting resources will stabilize operations, many centers that add staff or shift resources still experience:
If volume were the true constraint, increasing staffing would consistently resolve these issues.
Recent APCO events and programming have been leading the conversation about the need for PSAPs to create organizational resilience, not simply add headcount.
Volume by itself doesn't destabilize operations — friction within call center workflows does.
That friction typically appears in three places:
Non-emergency calls are often treated as secondary, but they still require accurate intake, documentation, and routing.
In many centers, this process is still largely manual:
Over time, this creates variability and extended wait times, as non-emergency calls take up valuable call-taker time.
Some agencies are beginning to focus on operational consistency — like standardized intake models, clearer triage pathways, and documentation support.
The change is subtle but important: reducing volume is reactive, reducing friction is how capacity is built.
Every call requires multitasking:
When processes rely entirely on manual effort, cognitive strain increases — especially during peak periods.
The misconception is that high volume exhausts staff.
In practice, sustained cognitive overload does.
Current NENA programming reflects this reality. Educational sessions frequently address call-taker wellness, decision-making under stress, and performance sustainability.
When each call requires high manual effort, even manageable call counts can feel overwhelming.
Centers focusing on capacity design are looking for ways to reduce that strain through translation and transcription services and faster documentation workflows, including post-call summaries, so call-taker attention remains on caller care, not clerical burdens.
Training traditionally depends on live exposure, but QA review often competes with daily operational demands.
When feedback loops are slow and exposure is uneven, performance varies by shift, tenure, and workload.
Centers redesigning capacity are prioritizing:
The goal isn't faster onboarding. It's predictable performance under pressure.
Centers making measurable progress are not necessarily answering fewer calls.
They are:
Call volume, staffing challenges, and burnout are real problems in 911 call centers. But treating these as purely volume problems leads to temporary fixes.
The centers building resilience are redesigning how work flows through their systems — reducing cognitive strain, standardizing intake, and reinforcing consistent performance.