(UPDATE) STARTING Sept. 11, Filipinos will only need to dial one number in times of crisis: 911.
The Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG) on Friday announced the nationwide launch of Unified 911, a single emergency hotline that will replace more than 30 fragmented local hotlines.
Officials said the move delivers on President Ferdinand Marcos Jr.’s directive under the Bagong Pilipinas campaign to make communities safer and emergency responses faster., This news data comes from:http://erlvyiwan.com
Dial 911: New nationwide emergency hotline to go live on Sept. 11
“For too long, callers were left guessing which hotline to call, leading to delays that cost lives,” DILG Secretary Jonvic Remulla said. “Unified 911 should not just be a hotline. It is a lifeline. Every second matters, every call matters, every life matters.”
The new system will connect the Philippine National Police, Bureau of Fire Protection, Bureau of Jail Management and Penology, medical services, and local disaster responders through a single integrated network.
The service will be free, available 24/7, and language-sensitive, capable of handling calls in Tagalog, Cebuano, Ilocano, Waray, Tausug, and other Philippine languages.
Trained operators will assure callers with one standard message: “Help is on the way.”
The government has set a five-minute target response time, which officials said will be made possible by real-time coordination between agencies.
The DILG said Unified 911 is not merely a technological fix but a symbol of the administration’s promise that public safety is the foundation of stronger communities.

“Unified 911 is the nation’s single number, and the government’s single promise,” Remulla said. “When danger strikes, help will come.”
- ‘New NBI chief must be career official’
- Marcos orders lifestyle check on all govt officials amid flood projects probe
- Vatican puts Pope Francis' ecological preaching into practice with vocational farm center
- Kneecap to play Paris concert in defiance of objections
- Go files housing development bill
- Social pension eyed for indigent seniors
- Australia's mushroom murderer faces victims' family in court
- Philippine experts urge harm reduction strategy for tobacco control
- UN watchdog finds uranium traces at suspected Syrian former nuclear site
- LGBTQ+ Catholics make Holy Year pilgrimage to Rome and celebrate a new sense of acceptance