The City of Red Deer is marking National Public Safety Telecommunicators Week, which runs from April 12 to 18, 2026, by highlighting the essential work of the staff who manage the community’s emergency communications.
The Red Deer 911 Emergency Communications Centre acts as a central hub for safety, serving approximately 430,000 people across 70 communities in central and southern Alberta. The centre, which recently completed a 10-month renovation, is staffed by about 40 dispatchers who work 12-hour shifts. Typically, seven personnel are on duty at any given time to handle a constant flow of emergency reports.
Dispatchers maintain a fast pace, answering about 400 calls every day. Official standards for the centre ensure that 90 percent of calls are answered within 15 seconds, with most situations resolved within 90 seconds. To support their work and ensure lines remain open for true emergencies, the city reminds residents to use the local non-emergency line at 403-406-2200 for situations that do not require an immediate police, fire, or ambulance response.
Misuse of the 911 system remains a challenge for the team. Operators frequently receive hundreds of intentional non-emergency calls and between 75 and 100 hang-up calls each month that require a mandatory follow-up. Past data illustrates the scale of this issue, noting that in June 2022, the centre received roughly 15,000 total calls, with approximately 3,500 of those being accidental misdials, often caused by mobile phones placed in vehicle cupholders.
While the city-run centre manages fire and ambulance dispatch, the broader region also relies on provincial systems. In 2025, the Alberta RCMP handled more than 666,000 calls for service, with their operators averaging over 14,000 calls per week.