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Federal Communications Commission

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Federal Communications Commission Public Safety and Homeland Security Bureau Public Safety Communications Update View from the FCC David G. Simpson, Rear ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Federal Communications Commission


1
  • Federal Communications Commission
  • Public Safety and Homeland Security Bureau
  • Public Safety Communications Update
  • View from the FCC

David G. Simpson, Rear Admiral (Ret.) USN Chief,
Public Safety and Homeland Security Bureau
2
Text-to-911
  • On August 8, 2014, the Commission adopted a
    Report and Order which requires that
  • All CMRS providers and providers of
    interconnected text messaging services
    (collectively, covered text providers) must be
    capable of supporting text-to-911 by December 31,
    2014.
  • All covered text providers must commence delivery
    of 911 text messages to requesting PSAPs by June
    30, 2015, or within 6 months of the date of a
    PSAPs request (whichever is later).
  • Covered text providers must route 911 text
    messages to the appropriate PSAP, using coarse
    location or other equivalent means.
  • The Commission also adopted a Third Further
    Notice, which sought comment on
  • Enhanced location for 911
  • Roaming support for 911 and
  • Future texting services.

3
Text-to-911 Deployment
  • As of August 8, 2014, 121 PSAPS support
    text-to-911, and at least 48 others plan to go
    live this year or in early 2015
  • Available statewide in Iowa, Maine, Vermont, and
    in a number of jurisdictions in Colorado,
    Maryland, New York, North Carolina, Ohio,
    Pennsylvania, Texas, South Carolina, and
    Virginia.
  • Early adopters have had positive experiences with
    text-to-911 so far.
  • The Report and Order called for the Commission to
    establish a centralized database in which PSAPs
    can declare their text-readiness to covered text
    providers.

4
E911 Location Accuracy
  • There have been major changes in consumer habits
    since the Commission first adopted E911 rules.
  • The Commission adopted a Third Further Notice in
    February 2014, which
  • Proposed to require CMRS providers to locate
    callers indoors
  • Horizontally within 50 m for 67 of calls within
    2 years of adoption of rules 80 within 5 years
  • Vertically within 3 m for 67 of calls within 3
    years of adoption of rules 80 within 5 years
  • Sought comment on
  • Test bed for compliance testing
  • How to leverage commercial LBS and other
    technology to provide dispatchable address
    information in the long term
  • Requirements for TTFF confidence and uncertainty
    data identifying the technology used to provide
    location fix monitoring E911 data periodic
    compliance testing
  • Whether the Commission should expedite transition
    to unitary standard for outdoor calls
  • PSHSB is actively working on the next item in
    this proceeding and hopes to adopt some of the
    proposals from the Third Further Notice by the
    end of 2014.

5
Wireless Alerting and 911
  • There is a logical nexus between 911 and wireless
    alerting for emergencies.
  • We want to encourage the full exploitation of
    wireless alerting protocols and systems that are
    already in place, or soon will be
  • Wireless Emergency Alerts (WEA)
  • Emergency Alert System (EAS)
  • Integrated Public Alert and Warning System
    (IPAWS)
  • PSAPs are uniquely positioned to make the best
    use of wireless alerts, and we encourage them to
    do so.

6
911 Governance
  • PSHSB has been investigating the multi-state 911
    outage that occurred on Apr. 10, 2014. We are
    also looking into
  • Vermont statewide 911 outage (Aug. 7, 2014)
  • T-Mobile Outage (Aug. 8, 2014)
  • These incidents provide insight into the
    challenges for 911 service in an all-IP
    environment
  • NG911 transition architectures pose greater risk
    to 911 reliability than legacy 911 or full NG911.
  • System providers and state/local authorities need
    to coordinate on respective responsibilities in
    the event of an outage.
  • The Commission hopes to encourage transparency in
    operations and accountability during outages as
    we move toward the Technology Transition.
  • PSHSB will be issuing its report on the outage in
    the near future.

7
Cybersecurity and 911
  • The Commissions core mission is to protect the
    safety of life and property, and in the modern
    context, that necessarily includes the security
    of IP networks.
  • The NG911 environment presents real cyber risks
    that must be evaluated by PSAPs.
  • The National Institute for Standards and
    Technology (NIST) has provided a framework that
    PSAPs can use to evaluate risk and to develop
    plans for addressing risk, and we encourage them
    to do so.
  • Cyber threats are real, and it takes only one
    hacker to create a major public safety hazard.

8
FirstNet and NG911
  • FirstNet and the ESInets that will support NG911
    may be able to use some of the same
    infrastructure.
  • As the two services are built out, federal,
    state, and local governments have an opportunity
    to leverage the limited resources that are
    available for both.
  • Careful planning will be critical to ensure that
    these two services can be funded and built out
    with optimal efficiency, and utilized in
    parallel.
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