A new era: HSC to deploy institutional safety officers next week
New safety officers will be on patrol at Health Sciences Centre (HSC), and they're going to have the power to arrest and detain people who present a threat to staff, patients and visitors.
Shayna Fontaine has worked at HSC for nine years, and during that time some scary incidents have happened.
"It tends to happen before I get to the situation. But you hear about it after, or you're in the parkade and you walk by somebody, and there's something that's going on," said Fontaine.
Officials at HSC say the list of issues over the years has been lengthy - from vandalism to assault.
"Our patients get assaulted, our staff sometimes gets assaulted,” said Dr. Shawn Young, COO at HSC. “We need ways to be better able to support them."
That support is on the way.
Starting Monday, institutional safety officers or ISOs, will be on the job patrolling HSC.
They'll be deployed throughout the facility, including in the emergency room.
"They will have the pepper gel, they will have the ability as well to restrain patients and folks who are escalated, who need to be restrained. ISOs have heightened powers,” said Uzoma Asagwara, Manitoba Health Minister
The number of ISOs at HSC will initially be relatively low. About 10 will be on duty in the first wave.
But more people are in the process of being trained.
"We're going from zero. We'll get to half a dozen, or a dozen, in each training session to get us up to the full 40,” said Young.
Young said this is just a part of a broader effort to enhance security at the hospital. That change sounds very good to Fontaine.
"I think that's going to make everyone feel safer on campus," said Fontaine.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
BREAKING Donald Trump picks former U.S. congressman Pete Hoekstra as ambassador to Canada
U.S. president-elect Donald Trump has nominated former diplomat and U.S. congressman Pete Hoekstra to be the American ambassador to Canada.
Genetic evidence backs up COVID-19 origin theory that pandemic started in seafood market
A group of researchers say they have more evidence to suggest the COVID-19 pandemic started in a Chinese seafood market where it spread from infected animals to humans. The evidence is laid out in a recent study published in Cell, a scientific journal, nearly five years after the first known COVID-19 outbreak.
This is how much money you need to make to buy a house in Canada's largest cities
The average salary needed to buy a home keeps inching down in cities across Canada, according to the latest data.
'My two daughters were sleeping': London Ont. family in shock after their home riddled with gunfire
A London father and son they’re shocked and confused after their home was riddled with bullets while young children were sleeping inside.
Smuggler arrested with 300 tarantulas strapped to his body
Police in Peru have arrested a man caught trying to leave the country with 320 tarantulas, 110 centipedes and nine bullet ants strapped to his body.
Boissonnault out of cabinet to 'focus on clearing the allegations,' Trudeau announces
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has announced embattled minister Randy Boissonnault is out of cabinet.
Baby dies after being reported missing in midtown Toronto: police
A four-month-old baby is dead after what Toronto police are calling a “suspicious incident” at a Toronto Community Housing building in the city’s midtown area on Wednesday afternoon.
Sask. woman who refused to provide breath sample did not break the law, court finds
A Saskatchewan woman who refused to provide a breath sample after being stopped by police in Regina did not break the law – as the officer's request was deemed not lawful given the circumstances.
Parole board reverses decision and will allow families of Paul Bernardo's victims to attend upcoming parole hearing in person
The families of the victims of Paul Bernardo will be allowed to attend the serial killer’s upcoming parole hearing in person, the Parole Board of Canada (PBC) says.