Tri-County Vanguard

Fire service group seeking standardiz­ed dispatch system

‘Dispatch has been an issue for over 10 years,’ says local FSANS representa­tive

- THEVANGUAR­D.CA

The province’s municipal units are being asked to support a resolution from the Fire Service Associatio­n of Nova Scotia (FSANS) that would “open a discussion ... towards rationaliz­ing fire dispatch across the province.”

The resolution calls for the fire dispatch standard developed by FSANS to serve as the “guiding principle” in the discussion, which the resolution says should include the Nova Scotia Federation of Municipali­ties, the Associatio­n of Municipal Administra­tors of Nova Scotia and the provincial government.

The standard, which was adopted in 2017, offers guidance regarding minimum technical, structural and operationa­l requiremen­ts of a profession­al dispatch service.

FSANS representa­tives in Yarmouth County say the fire service associatio­n was examining fire dispatch in Nova Scotia long before fire dispatch became such a big topic in this part of the province last year after the Town of Yarmouth announced it was looking to lay off its dispatcher­s.

The town’s position was that its taxpayers were paying an unfairly high percentage of the cost of the dispatch service, which was used by numerous fire department­s in southweste­rn Nova Scotia. Efforts to get the Town of Yarmouth to maintain its dispatcher­s eventually failed, leaving fire department­s having to find other dispatch options.

“Dispatch has been an issue for over 10 years,” said Paul Gould, alternate director for FSANS in Yarmouth County, referring to the provincial associatio­n’s examinatio­n of dispatch services across Nova Scotia.

He spoke of the Yarmouth dispatch centre as “probably one of the best in the province.”

Said Art Rose, the fire service associatio­n’s Yarmouth County director, “we didn’t want to lose Yarmouth because of the local knowledge and the local dispatcher­s.”

Still, Rose said he sees a provincewi­de fire dispatch centre being a possibilit­y down the line.

“Why we were scared of it in this area (during the uncertaint­y with the Yarmouth dispatch service) is because all the technology is not here available for us,” Rose said. “In the future, yes, I can see it happening.”

But the priority for now, he said, should be standardiz­ation.

“Whether it’s in Digby or Cape Breton” or anywhere else in the province, he said, “it’s standardiz­ation that we’ve got to go for.”

Rose is the Port Maitland fire chief. Gould is deputy chief of the fire department in Quinan. Fire dispatch standardiz­ation was on the agenda of the Jan. 8 meeting of Argyle municipal council, where Gould and Rose made a presentati­on.

 ?? ERIC BOURQUE ?? Art Rose, left, Yarmouth County director for the Fire Service Associatio­n of Nova Scotia, and Paul Gould, the associatio­n’s alternate director in Yarmouth County, during a presentati­on to Argyle municipal council on Jan. 8.
ERIC BOURQUE Art Rose, left, Yarmouth County director for the Fire Service Associatio­n of Nova Scotia, and Paul Gould, the associatio­n’s alternate director in Yarmouth County, during a presentati­on to Argyle municipal council on Jan. 8.

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