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911 EMERGENCY SERVICES
VoIP 911
Background
Since Americans were first able to dial "9-1-1" to reach
emergency services in 1965, the public increasingly has come
to depend on 911 in times of crisis. The communications
industry, the states, and the Federal Communications
Commission ("FCC") have worked hard to ensure that 911 is
almost universally available on traditional wireline and
wireless phones so that the public has access to emergency
services. Telecommunications capabilities have advanced
considerably since 1965. Most wireline 911 service has been
enhanced ("E911") with the ability to provide caller
identification and location information to the call answering
center ("E911") and the FCC has established a program to
require wireless telephone carriers to provide E911
capability. Not long ago, however, the states and the FCC
began to recognize that consumers may not always understand
that E911 and basic 911 services may work differently - or not
at all - over Voice over Internet Protocol ("VoIP") services.
Because in many cases, VoIP services operate much like
traditional telephone service, including the capability to
make calls to and receive calls from users on the traditional
telephone network, some customers assume that these services
also offer comparable access to 911 services.
In May 2005,
the FCC adopted rules that respond to the threat that such
misunderstandings pose to public safety. The FCC adopted rules
requiring providers of interconnected VoIP services to supply
911 emergency calling capabilities to their customers as a
mandatory feature of the service by November 28, 2005.
"Interconnected" VoIP services are VoIP services that allow a
user generally to receive calls from and make calls to the
traditional telephone network. Under the FCC rules,
interconnected VoIP providers must:
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Deliver all
911 calls to the local emergency call center;
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Deliver the
customer’s call back number and location information where
the emergency call center is capable of receiving it; and
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Inform
their customers of the capabilities and limitations of their
VoIP 911 service.
The
Federal/State Task Force
Access to 911 and emergency services is an issue that affects
us at all levels - national, state, and local. Therefore, the
FCC and the National Association of Regulatory Utility
Commissioners ("NARUC") formed the Joint Federal/State VoIP
Enhanced 911 Enforcement Task Force to facilitate compliance
with and enforcement of the FCC’s VoIP 911 rules. The Task
Force, which consists of staff from the FCC and State Public
Utility Commissions, will coordinate closely with the National
Emergency Number Association, the Association of Public Safety
Communications Officials, and state and local 911 authorities.
The Task Force’s mission is to develop educational materials
to ensure that consumers understand their rights and the
requirements of the FCC’s VoIP 911 Order; develop appropriate
compliance and enforcement strategies; compile data; and share
best practices.
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