No, worse--Sheriff's Deputies! To be fair, the Sheriff's office has gotten a lot better since taking over dispatching about a year and a half ago, but they don't have any backup dispatchers. So any time one goes on vacation or is sick, their choices are to try and see if another dispatcher can cover or to pull a Deputy. Each Township has their own FD but we only have 3 EMS departments in the county. The other 2 are centered around 1 town and is generally where the deputies live/work. Ours is out in the middle of nowhere and we cover multiple counties and towns. They've been instructed to always give Fire/EMS runs a township (We have something like 6 main streets in our district) but when they give a location, they often don't go further than "the elementary school," or "town hall," or "village green."
Before budget cuts we actually had our own dispatcher and most of them were also members of the squad who did a shift or two a week part time as a dispatcher. They shared an office with PD. It was nice to have people that know how you operate and to know how your dispatcher operates. As a courtesy to the FD's we ran with, we also monitored firegrounds for them for something like a measly $1k a year.
But budget cuts caused them to consolidate dispatching centers so our dispatching center is now far, far away (I've actually never been to it, I just know it's about half an hour outside of us). Which unfortunately put dispatching into the hands of people who have no EMS training (it took us a year to get them to stop just calling injured person or ill person on everything, but they didn't understand BLS vs ALS and how a cardiac run would get ALS but an ill person gets BLS).
An unpleasant side effect is that they can't monitor our EMS Tac channel or our Firegrounds because they are too far away. So our choices are to use an unmonitored fireground (which we sometimes do for rescue incidents) or to use the main dispatch channel as our fireground (which is repeater-ed). Needless to say, if we've got two incidents going on at once, dispatching for the entire county grinds to a halt...