Emergency hotline 911 calls rerouted to LGUs after 2 agents tested positive for COVID-19 – DILG
August 30, 2020
The Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG) has temporarily rerouted all Emergency Hotline 911 (E911) calls to local call centers after two of its call agents tested positive for coronavirus disease.
Interior Undersecretary and spokesperson Jonathan Malaya said on Sunday that all of their Emergency Telecommunicators (ETC), including 10 Department of Health (DOH) COVID Hotline agents assigned to E911, are under home quarantine as a safety precaution while the 911 National Call Center (NCC) is being disinfected, proper ventilation is being installed, and contact tracing is being conducted.
“In order to ensure the health of our personnel, we have adopted this temporary arrangement to continue serving the public with the help of call centers managed by Local Government Units. All of our personnel have undergone PCR tests, are currently under home quarantine, and will return to work as soon as they test negative or have completed the 14-day quarantine,” Malaya said.
“Because of the pandemic, we are facing serious technical, manpower, and operational challenges, but we are now addressing these issues, and we hope to partially operate by September 7 and then fully operate by September 16,” he added.
The official said they were supposed to have an additional 17 ETCs from the Bureau of Fire Protection (BFP), also an attached agency of the DILG, after they underwent training this month. But he said two of them also tested positive for COVID-19, hence, their deployment was suspended and they are now undergoing quarantine.
According to E911 Executive Director Diosdado Valeroso, even before the COVID-19 pandemic, the E911 hotline was already handling an overwhelming number of calls despite only having 80 ETCs nationwide who work in shifts 24 hours a day to answer calls.
In 2019 alone, he said E911 calls swelled to 18.482 million from 1.46-million calls in 2016, which further exacerbated this year when the E911 National Call Center started taking COVID-related calls in a partnership with the DOH that began on March 17.
He said the two ETCs who tested positive for COVID-19 are now recovering from the disease and are in isolation.
“Our intention is to redeploy all our agents, together with the DOH agents assigned to us, as soon as its safe for our personnel,” Valeroso said.
Malaya, on the other hand, said they are now exploring a work-from-home arrangement for a portion of their workforce so that E911 can answer emergency calls and dispatch emergency responders if a similar situation happens again.
He said in the meantime, there is a delay in the handling of rerouted calls because there are only eight local call centers handling the rerouted calls.
Malaya appealed to the public for understanding and promised that E911 should be fully operational as soon as the safety of their ETCs is assured.
The E911 hotline is a DILG-run security and development program that provides response and emergency assistance to people in distress. Ella Dionisio/DMS
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