Close calls, crucial lost minutes prompt 911 changes - Action News
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Close calls, crucial lost minutes prompt 911 changes

Towns in the Humber Valley and Bay of Islands are demanding changes to the 911 system, and it looks like they're going to get them.

Odds of saving lives go down after 10 minutes, says Pasadena fire chief

The new province-wide 911 emergency call system funnels all calls from Newfoundland and Labrador to dispatch centres in St. John's and Corner Brook. (CBC)

Towns in the Humber Valley and Bay of Islands area are demanding changes to the 911system, and it looks like they're going to get them.

Krista Ricketts,a councillor in McIvers, saidher mother called 911 last month because her uncle was having trouble breathing but an ambulance from Corner Brook was dispatched rather thanthe local fire department.

She saidthe response time was about 50 minutes instead of less than 15 and that's unacceptable.

"She only lives less thana two minute walk from the fire hall so by the time that they get there and gettheir gear,you would assume that theywould be there within about 10 to 15 minutes," said Ricketts.

"If it's a medical emergency or a fire emergency, we would hope that, knowing that our fire department is capable, that they send out our fire department as well as an ambulance They have oxygen, they have a defibrillator,if need be they can keep you alive until an ambulance shows."

Ricketts said her mother called 911 a second time asking for the fire department to be dispatched,and they arrived within 10 minutes of that call. She saidher uncle may not have survived if the fire department hadn't shown up first.

Response time critical

Residents in the Humber Valley and Bay of Islands area say the fire department should be automatically dispatched with an ambulance to any medical emergency. (CBC)

The new province-wide 911 emergency call system whichcame into effect just over a year agofunnels all calls from Newfoundland and Labrador to dispatch centres in St. John's and Corner Brook.

Pasadenafire chiefDarrenGardner knows all about response time and feels this new system has downgraded what they already had.

"Province-wide 911 is a great thing in concept. It's just the way it was rolled out in the Bay of Islands and Humber Valley area We already had a very efficient 911 system in my opinion," he told CBC's Corner Brook Morning Show.

"The RNC (Royal Newfoundland Constabulary) handled our 911 calls and our dispatching and that had gone on for probably 2 1/2decades and we had gotten to a point where it really worked well and communication back and forth between their organization and ours was really quite good."

Under the new structure, Gardner said 911 calls that are deemed by an operator to be medical, are directed to Western Health and thenparamedics make the call as to whether or not a fire departmentwould be dispatched.

Those minutes are really crucial.You've got 10minutes to really make a difference.- Darren Gardner

"It kind of got cumbersome and confusing because who wasresponsiblefor making that call at first? Who was answering the line on the hospital's end?" he said.

"Those minutes are really crucialand you're talking about what they refer to as the golden 10minutes. You've got 10minutes to really make a differenceafter that period yourodds are going drastically downhill fast and you're fighting a real battle then," he said.

"Everycase is different, but under the old system where it was directly dispatched through the RNC, then you know, sevenminutes was usually ourresponsetime."

Changes coming

The minister responsible for fire and emergency services, Eddie Joyce,agrees and saidthat the provincial 911 centre should automatically call in the closest fire department if it's equipped to handle medical calls.

He added that this was whatcommunities in the area were used to when the Royal Newfoundland Constabulary took care of911 calls,and he wants it back that way.

Minister Eddie Joyce says the new province-wide 911 service needs to change back to the way it was. (CBC)

"I know they've been working on it for a while, and I know now that it can be done very easily, and it will be done very easily, so thisis just a point of principle There's no extra resources needed, there's no extra money needed."

Joyce says municipalities and fire departments in the Bay of Islands and Humber Valley are being surveyed to see what services they can provide.

He said once that information is available, he expects the change back to amulti-agency notification systemshould happen within weeks.

According to Gardner, that's good news for the area,and he feels the minister's timeline is realistic.

"I think it's very encouraging ... It's going to be interesting to see how it all rolls out but it's certainly a step in the right direction," he said.

"It shouldn't be that difficult, if it's going into a common point which it is ... it's just a matter of training and putting the policies in place."

with files from the Corner Brook Morning Show