Monday, June 8, 2026
ADVT 
National

B.C. 911 Call Centre Asks Public To Stop Calling To Complain About Broken Wi-Fi

The Canadian Press, 30 Dec, 2014 10:58 AM
  • B.C. 911 Call Centre Asks Public To Stop Calling To Complain About Broken Wi-Fi
VANCOUVER — B.C.'s largest 911 call centre is asking the public to stop draining its emergency resources with complaints about cold food or broken Internet.
 
E-Comm has released a list of 10 reasons to not call 911, saying it is a reminder that the emergency line is not an information line.
 
The centre says calls have included someone asking for a replacement slice of pizza because theirs isn't fresh, inquiries about the date, or asking for a taxi.
 
In one instance, someone called to ask for help finding their lost glasses.
 
But the centre's number one reason not to call is to report that Wi-Fi at a coffee shop isn't working, which it says was this year's top nuisance call.
 
Spokeswoman Jody Robertson says 911 call takers simply cannot answer questions about how long power outages will last, or when the clocks turn back, as E-Comm receives approximately 2,600 calls per day.

MORE National ARTICLES

Report Questions BC Agency That Probes Police

Report Questions BC Agency That Probes Police
VANCOUVER - An independent agency created to handle serious cases involving police officers in British Columbia started its very first investigation by deploying two former cops who weren't legally permitted to be investigators, says a newly released report.

Report Questions BC Agency That Probes Police

One Mom Makes It Her Mission To Encourage Girls To Seek Careers In Science

One Mom Makes It Her Mission To Encourage Girls To Seek Careers In Science
Kelly Mathews is on a mission — to get more girls interested in STEM. That's science, technology, engineering, and math. And for Mathews, it's a mission that begins at home with her 9-month old daughter, Marilyn.

One Mom Makes It Her Mission To Encourage Girls To Seek Careers In Science

New Fight Brewing Over Refugee Benefits In Canada

New Fight Brewing Over Refugee Benefits In Canada
OTTAWA - A new battle is brewing between refugee advocates and the federal government — this time over whether those awaiting a decision on their refugee status ought to have access to social assistance.

New Fight Brewing Over Refugee Benefits In Canada

U.S. Senate debates Keystone XL before milestone vote on pipeline bill

U.S. Senate debates Keystone XL before milestone vote on pipeline bill
WASHINGTON — The U.S. Senate is poised to vote for the first time on the Keystone XL pipeline this evening — a milestone in a drawn-out political dogfight that has dragged on for years.

U.S. Senate debates Keystone XL before milestone vote on pipeline bill

Tories win Ontario, Alberta byelections but Liberals show most momentum

Tories win Ontario, Alberta byelections but Liberals show most momentum
OTTAWA — Prime Minister Stephen Harper's Conservatives have narrowly retained the late Jim Flaherty's suburban Toronto seat and easily hung on to another riding in their Alberta stronghold.

Tories win Ontario, Alberta byelections but Liberals show most momentum

CF-18s strike ISIL warehouse being used to construct roadside bombs

CF-18s strike ISIL warehouse being used to construct roadside bombs
KUWAIT CITY — Canadian fighter jets and other coalition aircraft have effectively flattened an enemy warehouse in northern Iraq as part of a major night-time operation against the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant.

CF-18s strike ISIL warehouse being used to construct roadside bombs