24/7 Emergency Response Active Parkland County · Edmonton · Alberta-wide

Capability

The line stopped. We're already rolling.

Mobile crews with welding trucks, full tooling and parts — dispatched fast, working safe, back to production sooner. Dispatch answers live, 24/7/365. No voicemail, no call tree, no "we'll get back to you." When the unit goes down, a ticketed millwright-mechanic-welder is in the truck before the call ends.

Overview

When production stops, the clock is the competition.

Every minute a unit is offline has a number attached to it. On critical production equipment, that number is usually four digits. On a major asset, five. On a power unit at peak demand, six. The emergency-response service exists to make that number as small as possible.

KBIM runs a dedicated 24/7/365 emergency dispatch line — answered live by a coordinator who knows our crew, our tooling, and our service area. No phone tree, no voicemail, no "someone will call you back." The call gets a name, a truck, a crew, and an ETA before you hang up.

Every emergency truck rolls with a full mobile shop: a ticketed millwright-mechanic who can weld, a fully-stocked service body with hydraulic fittings, pneumatic parts, cylinder seals, fasteners, and the fluids to match. B-pressure welding capability on-truck. Portable machining tooling, rigging, laser alignment kit, vibration analyzer. The truck is the shop — rolling to your site.

Most emergency calls get fixed on the first visit. Not escalated, not "we need to come back with more parts," not passed to another crew at shift change. The same tech who rolled out of the yard is the tech who starts the unit back up, hands you the documentation, and heads home. One call. One crew. One invoice. Back to production. Same shift, most of the time.

What's included

Six things on every truck. Every time.

Emergency response isn't a specialty — it's readiness. Here's what the crew shows up with, before we even know what the problem is.

Live dispatch, answered

No phone tree. No voicemail. No "your call is important to us." A human who knows the crew picks up under 30 seconds and has a truck assigned before you're done describing the problem.

24 / 7 / 365LiveNamed

Welding trucks, ready

Fully-equipped service trucks with B-pressure welding capability, cutting, grinding, common hydraulic & pneumatic parts, cylinder seals, and the fluids that match the systems in our service area.

B-PressureStockedMobile shop

Multi-trade crew

One tech in the truck who can run millwright work, mechanical diagnostics, and B-pressure welding. One person, multiple trades — instead of waiting three hours for the second trade to arrive from a different vendor.

Red SealMulti-ticketAutonomous

Diagnostic kit on-board

Vibration analyzer, thermal imager, hydraulic test gauges, laser alignment, ultrasonic leak detector — the tools to find the real problem, not guess at it, on the first call.

VibrationThermalLaser

Rigging & lift ready

Portable rigging gear, slings, come-alongs, and small hydraulic jacks on every truck for the 90% of emergency jobs that need a lift. For the bigger ones, the gantry is in the next truck behind.

SlingsJacksEngineered

Full job documentation

Even at 2 a.m. on a breakdown call, every job closes out with a written report — scope, what was found, what was done, readings, photos, and a recommendation for follow-up. Paper matches the work.

PhotosReadingsWritten

How it runs

From phone ring to unit running.

A clean emergency response is boring. Nothing fancy, no heroics, no scrambling — just a process that's been run a thousand times, doing what it's supposed to do.

  1. 1

    Call · under 30 sec

    Dispatch answers live. Problem scoped in 2 minutes, crew assigned, ETA confirmed, site access details captured. Call ends with a name and a truck rolling.

  2. 2

    Roll · under 60 min

    Truck departs yard fully-stocked. Crew briefed en-route, site safety check requested, required PPE / site-specific inductions confirmed before arrival.

  3. 3

    Diagnose & fix

    On-site. Asset assessed, failure diagnosed with on-truck instruments, parts pulled from truck stock (or expedited if specialty), repair executed, verified, tested.

  4. 4

    Run & hand-back

    Unit started, observed through first run, as-left readings captured, written close-out delivered to the maintenance lead on-shift. Back to production. Documentation follows.

What's on the truck

A rolling shop. Ready before the call comes in.

Every emergency truck is stocked the same way — so the tech who gets dispatched has exactly what the tech before last shift had. Predictable tool inventory is the difference between a one-visit fix and a three-visit callback.

Welding capability

Stick · MIG · TIG · B-pressure

Hydraulic test kit

To 10,000 psi · on every truck

Thermal imager

FLIR · hot-spot / bearing

Vibration analyzer

Route-capable · quick-capture

Laser alignment

Pruftechnik · re-align on restart

Parts inventory

Hyd · pneu · seals · fasteners

Rigging & lift

Slings · come-alongs · jacks

Fluids & consumables

Common hyd oils · grease · gas

Where the calls come from

When the unit stops — anywhere in Alberta — the phone rings here.

Wellsite hydraulic failures in Drayton Valley. Gearbox breakdowns at 2 a.m. in a Sundre gas plant. Grain-elevator drives in feed mills that can't miss the harvest window. Power-generation auxiliaries on peak-demand days. Pulp mills on night shift. Mining conveyors in remote sites. Six sectors, one dispatch line.

01 — Oil & Gas

Wellsites, plants, pipeline stations.

Hydraulic failures on wellsite equipment, pump breakdowns at SAGD facilities, compressor emergency work at pipeline stations — dispatched province-wide, on-site in hours.

02 — Power generation

When peak demand is right now.

Auxiliary system failures, boiler-feed pump emergencies, cooling-tower drive breakdowns — the calls that come during peak demand and can't wait for the morning shift.

03 — Agriculture & grain

Harvest can't pause.

Bucket-elevator drive failures, conveyor breakdowns, leg-and-boot emergencies during harvest — when a grain terminal stops receiving, every truck at the scale is a cost.

04 — Forestry & pulp

Night shift, every shift.

Debarker mechanical failures, chipper emergencies, pulp-line pump breakdowns — BC and AB mills on 24/7 production where the next shift starts in 4 hours and the unit has to run.

05 — Mining & aggregates

Remote site. No excuses.

Crusher failures, conveyor drive emergencies, screen-deck breakdowns — mobilizing to remote sites with the tooling and crew to fix it once, not the tooling to scout the problem and come back.

06 — Heavy manufacturing

When the line stops paying.

Press failures, line hydraulics, conveyor emergencies, packaging breakdowns — continuous-line operations where the cost of downtime compounds by the minute.

Safety & compliance

Fast is good. Fast & reckless is how people get hurt.

Emergency work is the highest-pressure environment our crews see — production waiting, the clock running, decisions made in the dark, on a system nobody's walked through in six months. This is exactly where process discipline matters most. Speed is not permission to skip the paperwork.

  • Site-specific JSA completed before work starts — no exceptions
  • Lock-out / tag-out verified by the tech doing the work
  • Stored-energy isolation confirmed before tools come out
  • Dispatch maintains contact — welfare check every 90 minutes
  • Red Seal ticketed tech on every emergency roll
  • Written close-out before the crew leaves site

COR

Certificate of Recognition

ISNetworld

Contractor prequalified

ComplyWorks

Audit & compliance

Avetta

Supply chain verified

WCB AB

Good standing

Red Seal

Journeymen only

Frequently asked

The questions maintenance supers ask at 2 a.m.

How fast can you actually be on site?
Dispatch answers live under 30 seconds. Crew assigned and truck rolling under 60 minutes from call. On-site typically 2–4 hours depending on distance — inside Parkland County and Edmonton, most calls land in under 90 minutes from first ring. Farther out (remote SAGD, BC border, southern Alberta), 4–6 hours. If a specific site has a committed response time requirement, tell us once and we'll write it into the service agreement.
Do I need a service agreement to call, or can I call cold?
You can call cold — emergencies don't wait for paperwork. The (780) 555-0100 dispatch line takes any call, any time, from any operator. That said, clients with a master service agreement typically get a faster mobilization (we already have your account codes, site access details, safety orientation on file, preferred PO format), and locked-in rates for emergency work. Most repeat callers have an MSA within the first three jobs because the administrative side starts to matter.
What gets fixed on the first visit, and what needs a callback?
Roughly 85% of emergency calls get fixed on the first visit — hydraulic hose & fitting failures, common bearing replacements, alignment issues, pneumatic component swaps, small welding repairs, and general mechanical breakdowns are all in the truck-stock category. Callbacks happen when the failure requires OEM-specific parts (specialty seals, proprietary gearbox components, critical-spec pressure fittings) that aren't reasonable to stock on a general service truck. In those cases, we diagnose, stabilize, quote, and expedite the parts.
Can you work inside our safety orientation / site-specific induction?
Yes — most of our crew carries the standard orientations for major Alberta operators (common CSTS, PST, H2S Alive, fall protection, confined space, etc.). For site-specific inductions, give dispatch the contact and timing when you call; we can usually get the tech through a remote or arrival-orientation before work starts. For clients where this is a recurring issue, we pre-qualify a named crew to your site so it's not a bottleneck on the next emergency.
What does an emergency call actually cost?
Emergency work runs on time-and-materials with a stated callout rate, travel time, and standard labour rates — all disclosed up front, not invoiced by surprise. Parts from truck stock are billed at published rates. If a specialty expedite is required, we quote before the expedite runs. For clients with a master service agreement, rates are locked and the paperwork is one-page. The conversation about cost happens once — not repeatedly during the emergency.
Do you follow up after the emergency?
Yes. Every emergency closes out with a written report (scope, diagnosis, work done, parts used, readings, photos) delivered within 48 hours of the job. For failures where we recommend follow-up — a permanent fix, a PM program, a capital replacement — the recommendation is in the report with a quote attached. For catastrophic or recurring failures, we'll offer a root-cause analysis as a separate scope. The emergency doesn't end when the unit starts — it ends when the plant decides how to prevent the next one.