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July 2, 2026

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Local fire departments see uptick in false alarms from crash-detection alerts

Local fire departments see uptick in false alarms from crash-detection alerts

Shawville-Clarendon Fire Chief Lee Laframboise says the “crash-detection” feature on some new cell phones has caused several false alarms for his department recently. Photo: Sophie Kuijper Dickson.
caleb@theequity.ca

Shawville-Clarendon Fire Chief Lee Laframboise is expressing concern after his department responded to several false alarms triggered by cell phone crash-detection alerts. 

He said that several calls have come in recently that turned out to come from cell phones that were dropped. Some newer phones have “crash-detection” features that automatically call 9-1-1 if the phone senses a sudden change in speed or an impact. Laframboise said that if a phone falls out of a moving car or is otherwise struck, it can trigger a false alarm.

“We’ve had three calls in the last month,” he said. “Two of them came in as severe accidents. One of them came in as people on a boat drowning.”

Without further information to go on, these calls trigger police and fire crews to respond to the scene, at the expense of the municipality in question. 

“Sometimes it’s at a bad intersection, so I assume that it is a bad wreck. You go there with extra trucks, extra men and you get there and it’s [nothing],” Laframboise added.

MRC Pontiac public safety coordinator Julien Gagnon said that while he didn’t have any data compiled on the exact number of false alarms from these types of phone alerts, they’ve been seeing them for several years. 

“I don’t  think it’s anything new, I’d say since covid iPhones have had the technology,” he said. “There’s a tremendous amount of non-responsive 9-1-1 calls. That’s just one facet of it.”

He added that things like pocket dials or children accidentally calling also add to the number of false alarms they receive. He said that while fire departments deal with the crash-detection calls, police are often the ones to respond to other non-responsive calls. 

“If the caller doesn’t speak into the phone when the emergency call goes out, it requires a police response, so it’s more of a police issue to be totally honest with you,” he said.

A CBC News story from 2024, notes that other jurisdictions have experienced similar issues with the crash detection features. The article notes that users are able to cancel emergency calls if they’re not needed, and disable the feature if it’s not wanted.

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Local fire departments see uptick in false alarms from crash-detection alerts

caleb@theequity.ca

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