Gatineau to hire 911 dispatchers in wake of slow response to 2017 homicide

Gatineau's city council has OK'd the hiring of more than 10 employees to join their team of emergency dispatchers. It comes after police openly critiqued the dispatch service following the 2017 killing of Thérèse Gauvreau.

City awarded victim's family $115K in July last year after police took 31 minutes to respond to 911 call

CBC News ·
Gatineau police took 31 minutes to respond to a 2017 homicide, and now the city's council has voted to hire more than 10 additional staff for the 911 dispatch centre. (Michel Aspirot/CBC)

Fifteen months after a dispatcher's error slowed police response to what would turn out to be a homicide scene, Gatineau's city council has OK'd the hiring of more than 10 employees to join the force's emergency dispatch team.

The move comes after the city awarded Thérèse​ Gauvreau's family $115,000 in July last year, not long after police admitted they made a mistake by taking more than 30 minutes to respond to the elderly woman's homicide in January.

Gauvreau, 83, was killed at a home at 171 boul. de la Cité-des-jeunes on Jan. 18, 2017. Police were called to the neighbourhood after receiving a 911 call about an agitated man nees acting suspiciously. When officers arrived on scene, they found a man at the back of the home. Soon after, officers discovered Gauvreau's body.

According to a report into the police response, the dispatcher who took the call made an error when coding it. The call wasn't listed as a priority, which delayed the police response by 31 minutes.

The dispatcher no longer works for the police service.

Although the police chief said there was no way to know for certain whether a quicker response would have saved Gauvreau's life, he called for more staff and other improvements to its 911 call centre to help prevent similar errors.

The new staff are expected to be in place by Oct. 15.