E911 service deadline passes
WASHINGTON – Companies that provide Internet-based phone service could be barred from signing up new customers in at least some areas for failing to meet a federal mandate to provide reliable emergency 911 service in all their markets.
The deadline to show the government where enhanced 911, or E911, is available was Monday. However, companies and the Federal Communications Commission were tight-lipped, refusing to disclose details of compliance reports.
It was widely expected that no company would meet the deadline, since the FCC had given them only 120 days to comply – the VON Coalition, an industry group, has said as much. The coalition did its own survey and estimated that about two-thirds of Internet phone users would have enhanced 911 by the deadline.
House and Senate lawmakers had urged FCC Chairman Kevin Martin to be more flexible, giving the companies more time and more tools to speed deployment, but no announcement of an extension was issued Monday by the FCC.
Citing public safety concerns, the FCC in May ordered companies selling Voice over Internet Protocol, or VoIP, to ensure that callers can reach an emergency dispatcher when they dial 911. The dispatchers also must be able to tell where callers are located and the numbers from which they are calling.
VoIP providers were told that if they failed to meet the deadline they could no longer market their services or accept new customers in areas that didn’t have enhanced 911. They will not have to disconnect current customers who don’t have full 911 service, as some providers had feared.
Voice over Internet Protocol shifts calls from wires and switches, using computers and broadband connections to convert sounds into data and transmit them via the Internet. In many cases, subscribers use conventional phones hooked up to high-speed Internet lines. But the service can often be mobile, too, making it difficult to ensure that the call goes to the correct local emergency center.