For about four hours last Friday, many Winnipeggers watched a dangerous hostage-taking incident unfold in West Winnipeg. Police vehicles flooded the neighbourhood. Tactical officers arrived. Streets were closed. News cameras rolled.
By the end of the day, the immediate crisis was over. But behind the scenes, the work was only beginning.
Crime scenes had to be processed. Witnesses and victims had to be interviewed. Evidence had to be collected. Investigators, forensic specialists and support staff continued working long after television cameras left the area.
At the same time, calls for service continued to arrive from every corner of Winnipeg.
What many people may not realize is that major incidents don't just affect the neighbourhood where they occur. They can have ripple effects across the entire city.
The May 29 hostage-taking incident ultimately involved 77 Winnipeg Police Service units, including 38 General Patrol units, Tactical Support Team members, K9 officers, drone operators and other specialized resources. Within minutes, officers responding to the incident had to leave other calls for service to help manage what had become a rapidly evolving and potentially deadly situation.
As resources were redirected, calls waiting for police response began to grow.
By 2 p.m. that afternoon, the number of urgent calls waiting for response was nearly 80 per cent higher than the average Friday in May. Over the course of the weekend, the queue continued to build.
By Sunday afternoon, 337 calls were waiting for dispatch. That is 38 per cent higher than the same weekend last year and 57 per cent higher than the three-year average.
Adding to the challenge, Winnipeg experienced a homicide investigation during the same weekend, placing further demands on available resources.
To help maintain service levels, additional frontline officers were called in on both Saturday and Sunday.
Speaking during a recent Winnipeg Police Board meeting, Deputy Chief Art Stannard said incidents like this highlight a reality that is often unseen by the public.
People may witness the visible response to a major emergency, but rarely see the cascading effects that follow. One critical incident can draw dozens of officers, create investigative work that lasts for days and impact police response across an entire city.
This is simply the reality of emergency response.
“I have nothing but high regard for everybody that attended that call,” Deputy Chief Stannard told the Police Board. “… courageous and just the bravery demonstrated to attend and do what they have to do.
“They saved three people from that person.”
When lives are at risk, police officers will always go where they are needed most. The public expects that and deserves nothing less.
But major incidents carry consequences beyond the immediate scene. They affect staffing, response times and service delivery throughout Winnipeg.
Last week's hostage-taking incident ended with three hostages safely rescued and no injuries to police officers or members of the public.
What many people didn't see was the work that followed and the hundreds of other calls that continued waiting while officers responded to one of the most dangerous incidents of the year.
The hostage situation ended within hours. Its impact on police operations lasted much longer.
Read the related Winnipeg Free Press story for additional details(paywall): https://www.winnipegfreepress.com/local/2026/06/05/hostage-incident-underscores…
Read the original news release on the incident.
