Future of ambulance call centre still uncertain
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The future of a 999 emergency call centre run by an ambulance service remains up in the air.
In September, the regional NHS ambulance trust said the Bedford Emergency Operations centre was not up to "modern control room standards".
The GMB Union announced on Monday that the site, in Hammond Road, would remain open following an ambulance service board meeting.
However, a spokesperson for the trust said no decisions had been made on the future of its emergency operations centres.
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The site deals with calls from Bedfordshire, Hertfordshire and parts of Essex and Suffolk and is home to about 200 staff.
It also housed call handlers for the 111 service and the local patient transport service.
The trust was considering closing the site, repurposing it or refurbishing it.
An email sent to staff last year also acknowledged the trust had been recruiting and training more staff at its Norwich site, and Bedford workers were potentially going to relocate 48 miles away (77km) to Chelmsford, or 91 miles (146km) to Norwich.
But earlier, a spokesperson for the East of England Ambulance Service Trust (EEAST) said no decisions had been made on the future of its emergency operations centres (EOCs).
"A further report has been commissioned to explore a two-site proposal in more detail," an EEAST spokesperson said.
"This report will include a full review of our three current sites in Bedford, Chelmsford and Norwich, and will consider other viable sites in these locations."
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Labour MP for Bedford and Kempston, Mohammad Yasin, said the closure of the site would have "a significant impact on the region" and he welcomed the news it would remain open for now.
"Given how overstretched the ambulance service is, losing a control room would have risked compromising the safety of patients," he added.
GMB Union regional organiser Donna Thomas added: "The proposed closure would have had a serious knock-on effect on ambulance cover across the region and threatened public safety."
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