Brandon chosen as HQ for centralized dispatch of conservation officers

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BRANDON — If faced with a dangerous situation, conservation officers in Manitoba will soon be able to call into a main dispatch centre in Brandon for the first time in the service’s history.

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This article was published 15/06/2023 (854 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

BRANDON — If faced with a dangerous situation, conservation officers in Manitoba will soon be able to call into a main dispatch centre in Brandon for the first time in the service’s history.

A new 24-7 centralized dispatch service for conservation officers will operate out of the Brandon public safety communication centre, located in the Brandon Fire and Emergency Services Firehall No. 1.

Currently, the communications centre takes calls for 195 fire departments in the province, eight police departments including Manitoba First Nations Police Service, all 911 services for rural Manitoba and radio communications for environmental enforcement officers with Environmental Climate Change Canada.

Natural Resources and Northern Development Minister Greg Nesbitt speaks during an announcement at the Manitoba Conservation Office in Brandon about the creation of a new centralized dispatch centre for Conservation Officers that will be based in the wheat city. (Tim Smith / The Brandon Sun)

Natural Resources and Northern Development Minister Greg Nesbitt speaks during an announcement at the Manitoba Conservation Office in Brandon about the creation of a new centralized dispatch centre for Conservation Officers that will be based in the wheat city. (Tim Smith / The Brandon Sun)

An organization as large as Manitoba Conservation needs to have backup, said Robert Stewart, director of emergency communications at the Brandon public safety communications centre.

“It’s a scary prospect for an officer to be in the middle of nowhere and potentially get into some trouble,” said Stewart. “They could phone the RCMP to do some motor vehicle branch queries and things like that, but they didn’t have radio contact. They had radio contact with each other, but they didn’t really have radio contact with a central communication centre.”

The City of Brandon signed a $1.2-million contract with the provincial government to provide the new centralized dispatch service, which was announced Wednesday by Natural Resources Minister Greg Nesbitt, Justice Minister Kelvin Goertzen and Manitoba’s chief conservation officer, Earl Simmons.

The contract is for three years, with an option for a two-year extension.

All conservation officers are trained to a police standard, said Simmons, who added giving them the ability to reach a dispatch centre enhances both officer and public safety.

“We’re not limited to just doing natural resource enforcement. We’ve come across all kinds of other things like car accidents, impaired drivers, people who are wanted,” Simmons said. “If somebody’s wanted, we’ll arrest them, take custody, and turn them over to the appropriate agency.

“So, having the ability to call and say, ‘Hey, we arrested somebody in a warrant right now and we have them in custody, or we need assistance’, is reassuring to me as the chief to know that my folks have somebody to talk to and they make it home to their families at the end of the day.”

There are “20 or so officers” in Westman, said Simmons. Data provided by the province shows there were 583 prosecutions and 319 warnings from 2020 to June 14, 2023, in the districts of Neepawa, Boissevain, Virden, Carberry and Shoal Lake.

Additionally, the Manitoba government is reopening the conservation district office on Queens Avenue in Brandon that was closed in 2009. It will be staffed by two new hires, a sergeant and one officer.

Brandon is not a rural community, said Goertzen, but in many ways, it services rural areas around it.

“It’s a hub to Westman and different parts that don’t have the kinds of services they would have in larger centres. So, it’s a recognition that not everything has to be in Winnipeg and a recognition that we need to have services all around the province and Brandon is an extremely important part of that,” Goertzen said.

Brandon is not a rural community, said Justice Minister Kelvin Goertzen, but in many ways, it services rural areas around it. (Tim Smith/The Brandon Sun)

Brandon is not a rural community, said Justice Minister Kelvin Goertzen, but in many ways, it services rural areas around it. (Tim Smith/The Brandon Sun)

To become a conservation officer, trainees must complete 16 to 20 weeks of instruction at an approved law enforcement facility.

There are new conservation officers in training in Alberta, Nesbitt said.

“Our full complement right now is 90, and we’re currently down. But we have nine recruits in Alberta right now. That’s going to bolster that number, and we’re going to hire another class this fall. Once that’s done, we have plans to increase our numbers across Manitoba and reopen more offices that were closed under the previous government,” said Nesbitt.

The provincial government promised to fill vacant conservation officer positions, but it has failed to do so, said Tom Lindsey, the NDP critic.

“Under the PC government’s watch, vacancies have more than doubled since 2021, with one in five positions currently empty. In other provinces like Saskatchewan, conservation officers are paid nearly 30 per cent more,” Lindsey said in a statement.

The new dispatch centre is expected to be online in early August, said Stewart, who added, “we’ll flip the switch for conservation and take them over.”

— Brandon Sun

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