The Wilmac Wire
In this episode of The Wilmac Wire, hosts Emily McNulty and Steve McDonnell sit down with Nick LaMontia, GIS Manager at Kerr Emergency 911 and Southeastern Director on the NENA Board of Directors, for a conversation on emergency communications, GIS, and the evolving future of Next Generation 911. With 30 years in public safety, Nick shares his unconventional path into 911, from working as a housekeeper in Estes Park, Colorado to becoming a dispatcher and eventually stepping into national leadership within NENA. Along the way, he reflects on the importance of problem solving, teamwork, and finding purpose in helping others behind the scenes of emergency response. The conversation explores how GIS powers modern emergency communications and why location data is becoming increasingly critical as PSAPs transition to Next Generation 911. Nick breaks down how GIS supports dispatchers through mapping, response boundaries, and indoor location capabilities, and explains how new technologies are transforming the way emergency calls are routed and understood. Emily, Steve, and Nick also discuss the operational differences between working in rural and urban PSAPs, including Nick’s experiences dispatching in Estes Park, Houston, League City, and Kerrville. He shares how culture, staffing, and relationships between dispatchers and responders can dramatically shape the day-to-day experience inside a communications center. The episode also dives into NENA’s ongoing advocacy efforts around NG911 funding, dispatcher wellness, and the future role of AI in emergency communications. Nick explains why sustainable funding models are becoming increasingly important for smaller agencies and how technologies like AI-assisted translation, transcription, and non-emergency call triage could support dispatchers moving forward. Here’s what you’ll hear about: • Nick’s journey into emergency communications • Dispatching in Colorado, Houston, and rural Texas • How GIS supports 911 operations • The role of GIS in Next Generation 911 • Indoor mapping and location accuracy improvements • The importance of dispatcher and responder relationships • AI use cases in emergency communications • NG911 funding challenges for smaller agencies • Nick’s leadership journey through NENA Episode Breakdown: 0:01 Welcome and intro 1:28 Icebreaker and Nick’s background 5:23 How Nick found emergency communications 12:47 Dispatching in Houston versus smaller PSAPs 24:59 What GIS is and why it matters in 911 27:01 GIS and the future of NG911 29:21 AI and GIS in emergency communications 31:32 Nick’s day-to-day as a GIS Manager 35:05 Nick’s journey into NENA leadership 39:09 NG911 funding and advocacy efforts 41:17 Lessons from NENA and industry leadership 44:48 Closing thoughts and final reflections Connect with the speakers: Emily McNulty: https://www.linkedin.com/in/emily-miller-mcnulty-666b66152/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/emily-miller-mcnulty-666b66152/] Steve McDonnell: https://www.linkedin.com/in/stephen-mcdonnell-8659042b/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/stephen-mcdonnell-8659042b/] Nick LaMontia: https://www.linkedin.com/in/nickolas-lamontia-enp-2623558/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/nickolas-lamontia-enp-2623558/] 🎧 Listen to more episodes: https://open.spotify.com/show/2lhL8QkXa9LUYlXjSAp3OE?si=d5e08acce4d84db4 [https://open.spotify.com/show/2lhL8QkXa9LUYlXjSAp3OE?si=d5e08acce4d84db4]
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