Close X
Wednesday, January 8, 2025
ADVT 
National

Toronto May Join Growing Number Of American Cities With 911 Texting

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 Jul, 2016 01:26 PM
    TORONTO — A city council vote this week could set Toronto on the path to becoming the first jurisdiction in Canada where all residents can send text messages to 911 operators instead of calling them. 
     
    Coun. Norm Kelly is calling on the city to request that the Toronto Police Services Board consider adopting emergency texting.   
     
    Many parts of Canada, including Toronto and 500 other Ontario communities, offer 911 texting for people with hearing or speech impairments.
     
    Text service for people with special needs also exists in Manitoba, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, most of Quebec, and parts of Alberta and British Columbia.   
     
    But emergency texting for people without hearing or speech impairment is not available anywhere in Canada. 
     
    In January, the Canadian Radio-Television and Telecommunications Commission started a consultation process to create a regulatory framework for what it calls "next generation 911." The CRTC said this program could potentially include extending 911 texting to all Canadians.
     
    Kelly said calling 911 would still be the preferred means of communication, "but there could be circumstances where your safety's at risk, and/or you want to pass on more information than you could in a telephone call, (like) a photograph or video."
     
     
    He said that, after he tweeted about his motion, he heard from several people who said they had been in situations in which texting 911 would have made them feel safer than calling. 
     
    During the June 12 mass shooting at the Pulse nightclub in Orlando, Fla., several bar patrons, afraid to draw the shooter's attention by speaking to 911 operators, texted friends and family to ask them to call for help.
     
    In the United States, just over 650 of the country's 6,000 emergency call centres accept 911 text messages.
     
    Since 2014, the U.S. Federal Communications Commissions (FCC) has required all wireless service providers to make 911 texting available to any emergency call centres that request it.  
     
    Many of the jurisdictions using 911 texting in the U.S. promote the service with the slogan, "Call if you can, text if you can't."
     
    Kelly's motion will be tabled in a council session that starts Tuesday and continues Wednesday. 

    MORE National ARTICLES

    BC Ferries Offers New Southern Gulf Island Schedules As Two Ships Set To Arrive

    BC Ferries Offers New Southern Gulf Island Schedules As Two Ships Set To Arrive
    The Crown corporation has released next year's schedules for the routes from Vancouver Island and the Mainland to Galiano, Mayne, Pender, Salt Spring and Saturna islands.

    BC Ferries Offers New Southern Gulf Island Schedules As Two Ships Set To Arrive

    Homicide Detectives Take Over After Person Dies In Port Moody, B.C., House Fire

    Homicide Detectives Take Over After Person Dies In Port Moody, B.C., House Fire
    One woman suffered severe burns, while a man and five children were being treated in hospital

    Homicide Detectives Take Over After Person Dies In Port Moody, B.C., House Fire

    Don't Invite Thieves Into Your Home, VPD Warns

    Don't Invite Thieves Into Your Home, VPD Warns
    There have been over a thousand residential break-and-enters in Vancouver in the first half of this year and the VPD are asking the public to stop inviting thieves into their homes.

    Don't Invite Thieves Into Your Home, VPD Warns

    Supreme Court Lays Out New Framework For Ensuring Right To Timely Criminal Trial

    Supreme Court Lays Out New Framework For Ensuring Right To Timely Criminal Trial
    OTTAWA — The Supreme Court of Canada, citing a "culture of complacency" in the justice system, has set out a new framework for determining whether a criminal trial has been unreasonably delayed.

    Supreme Court Lays Out New Framework For Ensuring Right To Timely Criminal Trial

    Lost Soldier, Son Of Former B.C. Premier Recognized By University

    Lost Soldier, Son Of Former B.C. Premier Recognized By University
    James (Boy) Dunsmuir was among a group of Victoria residents and 1,193 men, women and children who died in the historic attack that factored into the United States' declaration of war.  

    Lost Soldier, Son Of Former B.C. Premier Recognized By University

    After Sunny Start, Liberals Hit Bumps In Relationship With Labour

    OTTAWA — Justin Trudeau said he was convinced unionized workers would vote Liberal.

    After Sunny Start, Liberals Hit Bumps In Relationship With Labour