/
/
/
/
/
British Columbians need a fully funded 9-1-1 service now: CUPE 8911

British Columbians need a fully funded 9-1-1 service now: CUPE 8911

VANCOUVER—The COVID-19 pandemic and recent extreme weather events have highlighted more than ever the need for properly staffed, fully funded 9-1-1 emergency call taking and dispatch services in British Columbia. That’s the public message of the Emergency Communications Professionals of BC (CUPE 8911) for this year’s Emergency Service Dispatchers and 9-1-1 Awareness Week (April 10-16).

“When you call 9-1-1, seconds count,” says CUPE 8911 President Donald Grant. “Lives are on the line, so you can’t afford to be put on hold for several minutes or left waiting too long for emergency services to arrive because there aren’t enough staff at E-Comm to answer all of the incoming calls.”

For this year’s Awareness Week, CUPE 8911 has launched its Seconds Count campaign, with transit shelter and billboard ads located throughout Metro Vancouver and in the Capital Regional District. Over the past several months, the union has shared the message with municipal agencies and other stakeholders that fund E-Comm: B.C.’s 9-1-1 service is unsustainably short-staffed and underfunded, and must be “right-sized” immediately to run properly and reverse a recruitment and retention crisis.

Recent member surveys only confirm what we already knew from last year’s Price Waterhouse Coopers report, commissioned by E-Comm, which identified critical staff shortages as a major problem,” says Grant. “Burnout and mental health challenges make it hard for our members to face every shift knowing they’ll have to skip bathroom breaks, take back-to-back calls without any recovery time, and work overtime to compensate for dangerously low staffing.”

CUPE 8911 has more than 600 members in B.C., including approximately 90 support staff. Their call takers and dispatchers, who respond to more than 5,000 emergency calls every day, are the first point of contact for 99 per cent of callers who dial 9-1-1 in B.C. E-Comm is the provider of call-taking and dispatch services for 33 police agencies and 40 fire departments across the province.

For more information, visit https://www.ecpbc.ca.

Share this

Latest News

Fruitvale municipal workers reach tentative agreement

Fruitvale municipal workers reach tentative agreement

May 12, 2026
FRUITVALE — The union representing municipal workers in Fruitvale, CUPE 2087, and the Village of Fruitvale have reached a tentative agreement, preventing any job action. “We want to thank our…
FRUITVALE — The union representing municipal workers in Fruitvale, CUPE 2087, and the Village of Fruitvale have reached a tentative agreement, preventing any job action. “We want to thank our...

Fruitvale municipal workers give 72-hour strike notice

Fruitvale municipal workers give 72-hour strike notice

May 11, 2026
FRUITVALE — The union representing municipal workers for the Village of Fruitvale, CUPE 2087, served the Village a 72-hour strike notice this morning. If the Village does not improve its…
FRUITVALE — The union representing municipal workers for the Village of Fruitvale, CUPE 2087, served the Village a 72-hour strike notice this morning. If the Village does not improve its...

Course set for CUPE BC as province’s largest union concludes 2026 convention

Course set for CUPE BC as province’s largest union concludes 2026 convention

May 2, 2026
VICTORIA — B.C.’s largest union has set course for the next year after wrapping up the CUPE BC annual convention. Over 500 delegates from across the province passed more than…
VICTORIA — B.C.’s largest union has set course for the next year after wrapping up the CUPE BC annual convention. Over 500 delegates from across the province passed more than...