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The Water Cooler
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OKC PD Local Hero
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<blockquote data-quote="OK Corgi Rancher" data-source="post: 3993180" data-attributes="member: 45773"><p>Our process at the PD was pretty streamlined. On a normal shift working a district, average time, from stop to detox (we usually didn't jail them), was 1.5 to 1.75 hours. Add a half hour if we jailed them. The county had a jail annex right across from the PD that was pretty handy. We had a worksheet that was mostly a check-the-box thing with space for notes like HGN numbers, SFST numbers, etc. The main FD HQ was co-located with the PD...so if we needed blood we could usually get a qualified paramedic for the blood draw. </p><p></p><p>Refusals were really quick and easy. On a refusal I could cut processing time at the PD to about 10 mins...all we had to do was a detox intake...everything else was check the box aside from the narrative.</p><p></p><p>I'd usually have the report done by the time I'd finished my observation.</p><p></p><p>When I got promoted and was the shift sgt, it was even quicker. Do the stop and SFSTs and hand it off to a district officer. <img src="/images/smilies/smile.png" class="smilie" loading="lazy" alt=":)" title="Smile :)" data-shortname=":)" /></p><p></p><p>I'd sometimes have another one stopped before the first officer finished the report!</p><p></p><p>Different story when I worked for the county up in the mountains. The SO was down in a Denver suburb and I was a minimum of 45 mins away...usually more than an hour. So I had at least an hour drive time added to the stop.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="OK Corgi Rancher, post: 3993180, member: 45773"] Our process at the PD was pretty streamlined. On a normal shift working a district, average time, from stop to detox (we usually didn't jail them), was 1.5 to 1.75 hours. Add a half hour if we jailed them. The county had a jail annex right across from the PD that was pretty handy. We had a worksheet that was mostly a check-the-box thing with space for notes like HGN numbers, SFST numbers, etc. The main FD HQ was co-located with the PD...so if we needed blood we could usually get a qualified paramedic for the blood draw. Refusals were really quick and easy. On a refusal I could cut processing time at the PD to about 10 mins...all we had to do was a detox intake...everything else was check the box aside from the narrative. I'd usually have the report done by the time I'd finished my observation. When I got promoted and was the shift sgt, it was even quicker. Do the stop and SFSTs and hand it off to a district officer. :) I'd sometimes have another one stopped before the first officer finished the report! Different story when I worked for the county up in the mountains. The SO was down in a Denver suburb and I was a minimum of 45 mins away...usually more than an hour. So I had at least an hour drive time added to the stop. [/QUOTE]
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