Congressmen say phone companies, regulators failing on 9-1-1
Jan 30, 2003 12:00 PM
Reps. Anthony Weiner (D-NY) and Joseph Crowley (D-NY) said Tuesday
that new information shows that cell phone companies and federal
regulators have failed to implement life-saving technology that would
allow emergency calls from cell phones to be tracked by police and
other emergency responders. At a Capitol Hill press conference, the
Congressmen announced new legislation that would accelerate
implementation of tracking technology, and strengthen FCC sanctions
against wireless providers who fail to comply with emergency
regulations.
In 1996, the FCC and wireless providers agreed to implement technology
allowing police, fire, and rescue personnel to locate people calling
9-1-1 on a cell phone. Wireless providers were required to make
substantial progress by October 2001.
The congressmen say that despite the availability of the necessary
technology, no progress has been made because the largest wireless
providers complained about the cost and the FCC caved. The regulators
stalled implementation to 2005.
More than 500 dead spots have been identified in New York City for the
six major carriers. The representatives added that a recent study found
that 33 popular cell phone brands are not equipped with FCC mandated
technology to to switch 9-1-1 calls from within a dead spot to another
carrier.
Weiner and Crowley plan legislation that will accelerate the FCC's
deadline for implementation of the tracking technology. Weiner plans
legislation to increase disclosure by wireless providers regarding dead
spots, and to toughen FCC sanctions for carriers that fail to
comply.
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