Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Montreal Latest North American City Being Urged To Explore 911 Texting Service

Darpan News Desk IANS, 24 Sep, 2016 03:18 PM
    MONTREAL — A local politician wants Montreal city council to become the next municipality to consider allowing residents to use text messages to communicate with 911 emergency operators.
     
    Francois Limoges, an opposition city councillor with Projet Montreal, says he intends to introduce a motion Monday night asking Montreal police to study the feasibility of such a service.
     
    Calls for widely available texting services are on the rise in some North Amercian cities since the mass shooting at an Orlando nightclub in June, when it was reported that some of the victims texted family members to ask them to call 911 out of fear of drawing the shooter's attention.
     
    In the United States, the Federal Communications Commission says about 670 dispatch centres can currently accept 911 texts.
     
    In Canada, 911 texting is available for people with speech or hearing impairments in most communities, with others still in the process of upgrading their networks to support the service.
     
    The Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC), which regulates telecommunications in Canada, is reviewing the potential for "next generation" 911 services and is expected to hold public hearings in January.
     
    Limoges is hoping Montreal's administration will follow Toronto, the first Canadian city to study expanding the service to all citizens earlier this year.
     
    Limoges says he believes texting could serve as a valuable police tool and save lives by allowing victims to contact emergency services without drawing the attention of an aggressor in active-shooter or domestic violence scenarios.
     
    "If we have the tools to allow police to better do their jobs and intervene faster and better when someone's life is in danger, there is no reason not to act," Limoges says.
     
    Several police and emergency operators contacted by The Canadian Press say talking directly with an operator remains their preference.
     
    Jody Robertson, a spokesperson for Vancouver's 911 dispatcher, says texting may increase response time due to a delay in messages and replies.
     
    Robertson says phone calls allow dispatchers to track call locations and provide valuable secondary information through background noise and the tone of a caller's voice.
     
    "Overall, there is concern regarding the amount of time lost in typing, sending, receiving and interpreting texts and loss of personal contact with callers and a lack of location information," she says in an email.
     
    Christopher Schneider, a sociology professor at Manitoba's Brandon University who has studied police and technology, says texting also raises questions of what to do with the increased amount of information coming in — which could eventually include video and photos.
     
    "If there's a relatively minor fender bender, and now (energency services) are being inundated with text and video in a circumstance where they might not require that data, what then?" he says. "Do they discard it? Do they keep it? We need to determine what the best practices should be."
     
    CRTC spokeswoman Patricia Valladao says a decision on expanding service will come later in 2017.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    New Overdose Data In B.C. Expected To Show Numbers Down Slightly, Says Terry Lake

      Health Minister Terry Lake and Public Safety Minister Mike Morris make the announcement this afternoon in Vancouver.

    New Overdose Data In B.C. Expected To Show Numbers Down Slightly, Says Terry Lake

    Criminal Defence Lawyer Wounded In Shooting Outside Toronto Law Office

    Criminal Defence Lawyer Wounded In Shooting Outside Toronto Law Office
    Peter Schilling, who saw the shooting from his second-floor office on Tuesday afternoon, said he was on the phone with a colleague staring out the window when he saw J. Randall Barrs get out of his car in the driveway of his Yorkville law office.

    Criminal Defence Lawyer Wounded In Shooting Outside Toronto Law Office

    Halifax Police Officer Challenges Demotion Over Incident During Traffic Stop

    Halifax Police Officer Challenges Demotion Over Incident During Traffic Stop
    Const. Matthew MacGillivray, a former police sergeant, was demoted in January after a Halifax Regional Police disciplinary officer found he had used unnecessary force and engaged in discreditable conduct.

    Halifax Police Officer Challenges Demotion Over Incident During Traffic Stop

    Ministers, PMO Staffers Get $1.1 Million In Expenses For Relocating To Ottawa

    Ministers, PMO Staffers Get $1.1 Million In Expenses For Relocating To Ottawa
    Taxpayers forked out $1.1 million to move some four dozen political staffers to Ottawa after Justin Trudeau's Liberals won power last fall.

    Ministers, PMO Staffers Get $1.1 Million In Expenses For Relocating To Ottawa

    Suspect Being Sought After Deaths Of Two People In Calgary Shooting

    A man and his common-law wife are dead after what police believe was a targeted, gang-related shooting in Calgary.

    Suspect Being Sought After Deaths Of Two People In Calgary Shooting

    Donald Trump As President Can Work With Canada Despite Trudeau Comments: Steve Forbes

    Donald Trump As President Can Work With Canada Despite Trudeau Comments: Steve Forbes
    Hours before the editor-in-chief of Forbes business magazine spoke to a conference of Quebec financiers in Montreal, Trudeau told the UN General Assembly in New York to reject politicians who exploit people's fears and anxieties.

    Donald Trump As President Can Work With Canada Despite Trudeau Comments: Steve Forbes