FCC requires VoIP providers to offer E911
By
Grant Gross
,
IDG News Service
, 05/19/2005
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VoIP carriers that connect to the U.S. public telephone network will be required this year to provide their customers with
enhanced 911 emergency calling service, the U.S. Federal Communications Commission ruled Thursday.
Commissioners called E911 an essential service for all telephone carriers to provide, whether the carriers use the traditional
public switched telephone network or IP networks. With E911, callers dialing 911 are connected to their local emergency dispatch
center, and dispatchers see the address of the callers on their computers.
"Today's action seeks to remedy a very serious problem -- one quite literally of life or death for the millions of customers
that subscribe to VoIP service as a substitute for traditional phone service," said Kevin Martin, FCC chairman. "Because certain
VoIP providers do not routinely connect their customers to 911 emergency operators, public safety officials across the country
have been unable to address certain calls for help in a timely fashion, resulting in several tragedies. This situation is
simply unacceptable."
The FCC's order requires VoIP carriers to provide their customers E911 service within five to six months. E911 must be a standard
feature, not an optional feature provided by VoIP carriers. VoIP providers that do not comply could be fined or ordered to
cease operations, according to the FCC.
Although some VoIP carriers cheered the ruling, not everyone was happy with it. The Information Technology Association of
America (ITAA), a technology trade group, accused the FCC of overstepping its authority in setting a deadline for VoIP carriers
to offer E911. Laws giving the FCC its authority don't allow it to require social obligations of technology companies, and
customer demand is sufficient to drive adoption of E911 among VoIP carriers, said Harris Miller, ITAA president.
"However well intentioned, today's FCC ruling seems to test the outer limits of the FCC's jurisdiction," Miller said in an
e-mail statement. "Congress never intended the FCC to be the 'Federal Technology Commission,' with broad authority over technology
applications and services."
VoIP carriers have told the FCC of technical problems that have kept them from providing E911, with fast-growing VoIP provider
Vonage complaining that incumbent telephone carriers have been slow to allow competing VoIP services access to their 911 services.
But on Thursday, Vonage announced it had reached agreements with three of the four large incumbent local carriers in the U.S.,
with new agreements with SBC and BellSouth in addition to an existing agreement with Verizon.
Thursday's FCC order requires incumbent local carriers to open up their 911 services to VoIP providers. The United States
Telecom Association, representing the major incumbent carriers, applauded the FCC decision.
In March, Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott filed a lawsuit against Vonage for what he called deceptive trade practices. Without agreements in place with incumbent local carriers, Vonage provided
an alternative 911 service that customers had to activate. Abbott, in announcing his lawsuit, noted a February incident in
which burglars broke into a house and wounded a mother and father while a child unsuccessfully tried to call 911 using Vonage's
VoIP service. The family apparently had not signed up for 911 when prompted by Vonage.
Because VoIP services route 911 calls through IP networks instead of the traditional telephone network, some VoIP phones have
phone numbers that can follow the phone wherever it's plugged in. With some VoIP providers, without access to the incumbent
911 services, dispatch centers aren't able to pinpoint the address where the VoIP call originated, unlike E911 service available
with most traditional telephone service today.
The IDG News Service is a Network World affiliate.
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