Home | WebMail | Register or Login

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

Sign Up

Sign Up

Please fill this form to create an account.

Already have an account? Login here.

Montreal

Quebecers will be able to text 911 in 2025

The Quebec government is investing $45.5-million over three years to modernize emergency call centres across the province. That will allow people to send texts, images or videos to 911 operators.

Updates will come into effect on March 2025

Bonnardel gestures with his hands
Public Security Minister Franois Bonnardel announced Monday that the province will invest $45.5 toward modernizing emergency call centres across Quebec. (Ivanoh Demers/Radio-Canada)

Quebecers will be able to text 911 operators andsend them images and videos by March 2025, the province announced Monday.

Public Safety MinisterFranois Bonnardelsaid Quebecwill invest $45.5-million over three years to modernize 36 call centres. This is part of a larger plan by the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) to expand emergency services nationwide.

The CRTC's Next-generation 9-1-1is expected to make interactions with operators safer, faster and more informed.

"With a text feature, a woman who is a victim of domestic violence and who cannot speak could pick up her phone and text 911 and communicate without her aggressor seeing," saidBonnardel.

Melpa Kamateros, who works with victims of domestic violence with the Shield of Athena, says this is an important step, especially as cases of domestic violence rose during the COVID-19 pandemic according to a study from the Universit de Sherbrooke.

"This will just expand the potential for victims to come out and to try and access services," says Kamateros. "By doing so, it will decrease, potentially, the danger to such victims."

She says the helpfulness of the expanded 911 service will come down to how the province promotes it.

"We want to see this accessible to everybody," she said.

"We have to also make sure that people who do not speak English or French, people that have no status, people that are the most vulnerable of vulnerable [that] they too can also access information about this service."

The texting feature will also allow people to share biomedical information and speed upcommunications with the operator.

"We have to save lives and saving lives is time," saidBonnardel.

The updates aren't expected to take place until March 2025. Until then, people will have to call 911 like usual if they need to reach emergency services.