B.C. RCMP send 1st active shooter emergency alert after updating policy following Nova Scotia shooting - Action News
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British Columbia

B.C. RCMP send 1st active shooter emergency alert after updating policy following Nova Scotia shooting

The RCMP in B.C. sent an emergency text alert for the first time in its historyduring an active shooting situation on Thursday, having updatedits policy around using the system after thedeadly mass shooting that left 22 dead in Nova Scotia last year.

Police used alerts Thursday to tell residents to stay inside, lock doors

A blurry photo taken from ground level shows numerous RCMP officers in uniform who appear to be struggling with someone, beside a white pick up truck with an open door.
RCMP arrest a suspect on Thursday after an active shooter situation in Vanderhoof, B.C., west of Prince George. (Submitted)

The RCMP in B.C. sent an emergency text alert for the first time in its history on Thursday, having updatedits policy around using the system after thedeadly mass shooting that left 22 dead in Nova Scotia last year.

Police sent the text alert to several thousand people in the Vanderhoof, B.C., area around midday in response to reports ofa man with a long gun targetingthe RCMP detachment.

The concern, RCMP said, was that the suspect had a vehicleand was driving through the community.The alert said there was an active shooter and told residentsto stay inside and lock their doors, sending workers and childrenout during the lunch break rushing inside.

Within an hour, the suspect was arrested and the lockdown was lifted.

Nobody was hurt.

B.C. police updated policies over last 18 months

Later Thursday, RCMPconfirmed it was the first time the straight-to-phone text system, known asAlert Ready, had been used in B.C. since the technology became available three years ago.

The overarching policy in B.C. had always been to reserve the national system for a tsunami, but police said that changed after tragedy on the other side ofthe country last year.

"The ability to issue a Police Emergency Alert has been thesubject of discussion and advancement since 2020 as a result of the tragic incident in Nova Scotia," said Eric Stubbs, assistant commissioner of criminal operations with the RCMP.

Stubbs said the B.C. Association of Chiefs of Police created a committee to "establish protocols and procedures"in case a police department needed to send an alert. He said police now have the option to usethe system when they have reason to believe there's an active threat evolving too quickly for officersto contain.

The alert Thursday was sent out to people within a 150-kilometre radius of Vanderhoof, which is about 100 kilometres west of Prince George.

A screen shot of an Emergency Alert text message sent to people's cellphones, that states there's an active shooter alert in Vanderhoof and gives instructions to people living in the area to shelter in place and follow police directions.
A localized police emergency alert was issued in Vanderhoof, B.C., on Thursday after reports of an active shooter in the community. Anyone in the area would have received the text, RCMP said. (Andrew Kurjata/CBC)

"We chose a larger radius outside of Vanderhoof given the suspect was mobile and driving," Stubbs said, adding that it had been a "dynamic situation."

The gunman responsible for the shooting in Nova Scotia last year had also been driving.

Eluding arrest by impersonating a police officer, the shooter drove to four different communities across the province and killed22 people over the course of roughly 13 hours.

The RCMPonly notified the Nova Scotia government that it wanted to send out an emergency alertfive minutes before police shot the gunman, according to records obtained by CBC.

Loved ones of those killed said more information about the shootings as they were unfolding could have saved lives. An inquiry has been established tolook athow policeand various federal and provincial agencies responded, andhow victims, their families and citizens were informed.

Last week, after southern B.C. suffered the most severe flooding event in decades, the province said it plans to change its protocols for using the Alert Ready system by next summer.