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JAM | Feb 26, 2025

Jamaica Fire Brigade decries ‘prank call crisis’ as nearly 1,800 false alarms recorded in 2024

/ Our Today

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 JFB Think Thank Commissioner, Jamaica Fire Brigade (JFB), Stewart Beckford, urges Jamaicans to desist from making prank calls, during an interview with JIS News, recently. (Photo: Shanna K. Salmon)

The Jamaica Fire Brigade (JFB) is again urging citizens to desist from making prank calls to the emergency services.

Brigade Commissioner Stewart Beckford, noted that in 2024 the JFB received 1,759 malicious false alarms, a 24.4 per cent increase when compared to the 1,413 calls received in 2023.

“The truth is that we continue to see these increases mainly because of the issues we have been experiencing with the bomb threat incidents that we have been responding to,” said Beckford.

The JFB responded to multiple false bomb threats at schools, BPO companies, and government agencies. Commissioner Beckford noted that prank calls increase during the summer when children are out of school and using their cell phones more.

“There is a proliferation of cell phones, four [and even] five-year-olds are carrying [them]. The truth is that a lot of these children, when they are home in the summer if they are not occupied, they use these phones to call the fire brigade,” mused Beckford.

“While we encourage persons to give these children the phone so that in case there is a genuine emergency, they can call or they can contact you the parent, you must discourage them from using it to make calls that are not real,” the commissioner argued.

The fire chief further emphasised that prank calls divert the JFB’s resources from real emergencies.

“It ties up valuable resources that could be deployed elsewhere. We have seen in the past where our units, either on its way to or returning from such a call that we thought was genuine, have been involved in accidents,” explained Beckford, noting that when this happens, some areas are left without fire coverage for an extended period.

Jamaica Fire Brigade personnel responding to a fire in the Corporate Area. (Photo: YouTube)

The commissioner informed that while Jamaica is not yet at a point where those who make such calls can be identified and prosecuted, a project is being worked on to remedy the situation.

“You will have one central number, and that system will be able to identify where callers are,” he said, adding that the system will also be helpful during genuine emergencies when a caller gets disconnected, as the location would be known.

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