RTO & Communication
1) Correct dispatching - Dispatching and being able to correctly use comms is essential for being an officer/trooper. Firstly you will contact dispatch via a correct comm using ‘[Callsign] To Dispatch’ Dispatch will then forward you or tell you to send it and your next response will be “[Callsign] send”. You will then send the information as it goes distinctly. This will be the situation (10-15, 10-80, 10-70, etc.) You will proceed, only if you can, to describe the suspect, their vehicle, any 10-50’s, etc. Furthermore, you will tell dispatch of your current 10-20 location, which will be displayed in the bottom left (E.g. Smoke Tree Road, East Joshua Road, Marina Dr. Airfield in Sandy Shores). Lastly, you will state if you require any additional units on the scene or any supervisor or specialized divisions. An example: “Going to be 10-11 with a black 4-door sedan, final 10-20 is on East Joshua road, facing East near the gas station in Sandy, 10-32, 10-71, code 2”. This is how dispatching should be, however, you may miss out on description or vivid description if need be, say you are under fire or are primary in a 10-80 and you have a secondary.
2) Speaking to civilians - At all times, as an officer, you must be respectful to civilians unless you are giving out the commands necessary. If they decide to throw insults or become verbally aggressive (Excluding threats, acts of violence, or self-harm) you will NOT return any insults or retaliate in any such way...
3) Speaking to higher-ups - At any given time you are to address a superior with formality and respect with no edge of mockery. You are to address them “Sir/Madam” or you may address them by their ranks such as Sgt. or Lt. In doing so they will treat you back equally with respect. This is also a good simple way of getting a good word put in for you however under no circumstance ask (unless you have proof of hard work) for a promotion or specific rank.