Browse: Departments Dates Agencies
Docket ID: [CG Docket No. 03-123 and WC Docket No. 05-196; FCC 08-78]
SUBJECT CATEGORY: Telecommunications Relay Services and Speech-to-Speech Services for Individuals With Hearing and Speech Disabilities; E911 Requirements for IP-Enabled Service Providers
DOCUMENT SUMMARY: In this document, the Commission adopts emergency call handling requirements for Internetbased telecommunications relay service (TRS) providers. These measures will ensure that persons using Internetbased forms of TRS, i.e., Video Relay Service (VRS), Internet Protocol (IP) Relay, and IP captioned telephone relay service (IP CTS), can promptly access emergency services, pending adoption of a solution that will permit Internetbased TRS providers to immediately and automatically place the outbound leg of an emergency call to an appropriate public safety answering point (PSAP), designated statewide default answering point, or appropriate local emergency authority.
SUMMARY: Telecommunications Relay Services and Speech-to-Speech Services for Individuals with Hearing and Speech Disabilities, etc.,
FCC 0878 does not contain new or modified information collection
requirements subject to the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA),
Public Law 10413. In addition, it does not contain any new or modified
``information collection burden for small business concerns with fewer
than 25 employees,'' pursuant to the Small Business Paperwork Relief Act of 2002, Public Law 106198, see 44 U.S.C. 3506(c)(4).
Synopsis
1. In the 2000 TRS Order, CC Docket No. 9867, 15 FCC Rcd at 5182 84, paragraphs 99102, published at 65 FR 38432, June 21, 2000 and 65 FR 38490, June 21, 2000, the Commission required TRS providers to direct emergency calls as quickly as possible to the correct PSAP by matching a caller's phone number with the appropriate PSAP electronically. The Commission also required communications assistants (CAs) to pass along the caller's telephone number to the PSAP orally, which would allow the PSAP to directly call back the calling party if the relay call became disconnected.
2. In 2003, the Commission again addressed the rules governing TRS
access to emergency services. 2003 TRS Order, CC Docket No. 9867, CG
Docket No. 03123, 18 FCC Rcd 12379, 1240609, paragraphs 4046 (June 17, 2003),
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published at 68 FR 50093, August 25, 2003 and 68 FR 50973, August 25,
2003. The Commission clarified that TRS providers must route emergency
TRS calls to the appropriate PSAP and required TRS providers to adjust
their databases accordingly. 2003 TRS Order, 18 FCC Rcd at 1240608,
paragraphs 4042 (rejecting proximity as criterion for determining the
appropriate PSAP and defining it, in light of the statutory functional
equivalency mandate, as the PSAP to which a direct 911 call would be
delivered over the PSTN). On reconsideration, the Commission clarified
that the appropriate PSAP is ``either a PSAP that the caller would have
reached if he had dialed 911 directly, or a PSAP that is capable of
enabling the dispatch of emergency services to the caller in an
expeditious manner.'' 2004 TRS Report and Order, CC Docket Nos. 90571
and 9867, CG Docket No. 03123, 19 FCC Rcd at 12559, paragraph 216,
published at 69 FR 53346, September 1, 2004 and 69 FR 53382, September
1, 2004. Because of jurisdictional boundaries, the appropriate PSAP is
not always the geographically closest PSAP to the calling party.
3. Emergency Call Handling Issues for InternetBased Forms of TRS. Through a series of orders between 2001 and 2007, the Commission examined the emergency call handling requirement as applied to Internetbased relay services and, in particular, considered the technological challenges associated with determining the geographic location of TRS calls that originate over the Internet. The Commission recognized that because these services use the Internet, rather than a telephone and the PSTN, for the link of the call between the calling party and the relay provider, the relay provider does not receive the ANI of the calling party. See, e.g., 2004 TRS Report and Order, 19 FCC Rcd at 12522, paragraph 117. As a result, there is greater complexity with identifying the caller's location and determining the appropriate PSAP to call to respond to the emergency. See, e.g., 2004 TRS Report and Order, 19 FCC Rcd at 12522, paragraph 117; see also IP Relay Declaratory Ruling and Second FNPRM, 17 FCC Rcd at 7789, paragraph 30, published at 67 FR 39863, June 11, 2002 and 67 FR 39929, June 11, 2002 (recognizing that, without ANI of the calling party, IP Relay provider petitioner could not provide PSAP with information regarding the calling party's location); and 47 CFR 64.604(a)(4) of the Commission rules. The Commission therefore determined that a temporary waiver was needed to the extent that these technological challenges hindered providers' ability to ``immediately and automatically'' place the outbound leg of an emergency call to an appropriate PSAP, as required by the Commission's emergency call handling rule. See, e.g., 2001 VRS Waiver Order, 17 FCC Rcd at 161, paragraph 11 (granting temporary waiver of emergency call handling requirement for VRS providers). The temporary waivers of the emergency call handling rule for VRS and IP Relay were scheduled to expire after December 31, 2007. See 2006 VRS Waiver Order, 21 FCC Rcd 14554; published at 72 FR 11789, March 14, 2007 (extending VRS waiver through December 31, 2007); IP Relay Reconsideration Order, 18 FCC Rcd 4761(extending IP Relay waiver through December 31, 2007); 2007 IP CTS Declaratory Ruling, 22 FCC Rcd 379 (waiving emergency call handling requirement for IP CTS until emergency access for the Internetbased forms of TRS is resolved).
4. In November 2005, the Commission released the VRS/IP Relay 911 NPRM seeking comment on possible means by which VRS and IP Relay providers might be able to handle emergency calls so that the waivers would no longer be necessary. VRS/IP Relay 911 NPRM, 20 FCC Rcd at 1948081, paragraphs 912 (at this time, the Commission had not yet recognized IP CTS as a form of TRS). The Commission recognized that many individuals use VRS and IP Relay to contact emergency services, rather than making emergency calls by directly calling 911 through a TTY and a traditional telephone line. The Commission therefore sought comment on what emergency call handling rules should apply to VRS and IP Relay providers, including by what means these providers may determine the appropriate PSAP to contact when they receive an emergency call. The Commission also sought comment on whether and how VRS and IP Relay providers may identify incoming calls as emergency calls so that such calls can promptly be directed to a Communications Assistant (CA) without waiting in a queue. VRS/IP Relay 911 NPRM, 20 FCC Rcd at 19487, paragraph 26.
5. In the VRS/IP Relay 911 NPRM, the Commission also sought comment on whether it should require the Internetbased TRS providers to establish a registered location process, similar to that adopted in the VoIP 911 Order, 20 FCC Rcd 10271, paragraph 46, published at 70 FR 37273, June 29, 2005, whereby each Internetbased TRS provider would be required to obtain from its customers, prior to the initiation of service, the physical location from which the particular relay service will be utilized, so that a CA may determine an appropriate PSAP to call to respond in the event of an emergency. VRS/IP Relay 911 NPRM, 20 FCC Rcd at 1948487, paragraphs 1924 (citing VoIP 911 Order, 20 FCC Rcd at 10271, paragraph 46) (describing Registered Location process for interconnected VoIP providers). Noting that the VoIP 911 Order had further required interconnected VoIP providers to offer their consumers a method of updating their ``Registered Location,'' the Commission sought comment on how it might ensure that Internetbased TRS providers have current location information, i.e., that the Registered Location is the actual location of the user when making an emergency call. VRS/ IP Relay 911 NPRM, 20 FCC Rcd at 19485, paragraph 21 (citing VoIP 911 Order, 20 FCC Rcd at 10271, paragraph 46) (requiring providers of interconnected VoIP services that can be utilized from more than one physical location to provide their end users ``one or more methods of updating information regarding the user's physical location'')); see also 47 CFR 9.5(d)(2) of the Commission's rules (``[I]nterconnected VoIP service providers must * * * [p]rovide their end users one or more methods of updating their Registered Location, including at least one option that requires use only of the CPE necessary to access the interconnected VoIP service. Any method utilized must allow an end user to update the Registered Location at will and in a timely manner.''). The Commission asked, for example, if users should be required to affirmatively acknowledge whether they are at their Registered Location each time they initiate a call and, if they are not at their Registered Location, be prompted or required to provide their present location. VRS/IP Relay 911 NPRM, 20 FCC Rcd at 19485, paragraph 21; cf. VoIP 911 Order, 20 FCC Rcd at 10271, paragraph 46 (any method utilized by an interconnected VoIP provider to update a customer's Registered Location must allow an end user to do so ``at will and in a timely manner''), 20 FCC Rcd at 10273, paragraph 49 (noting that ``customers of portable interconnected VoIP services likely will need to be instructed on how to register their locations with their providers, the need to update that information promptly when they relocate, and how to confirm that the registration is effective'').
6. In response to the VRS/IP Relay 911 NPRM, all of the commenting providers asserted that they presently do not have
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the technological means of automatically obtaining identifiable
location information from VRS and IP Relay callers. At that point in
time, providers stated that they had been working on a technological
solution for emergency access through Internetbased TRS services, but
they required additional time to find a solution. The Commission also
notes that the 2007 waiver reports filed by VRS and IP Relay providers
state that presently it is not technologically feasible to
automatically route emergency calls to an appropriate PSAP. See
generally 2004 TRS Report and Order, 19 FCC Rcd at 1252022, paragraphs
111, 11618 (conditioning waivers of the TRS mandatory minimum
standards on the filing of annual reports addressing waived standards).
Although commenters generally opposed Commission adoption of a
Registered Location process, similar to that adopted in the VoIP 911
Order, others expressed qualified support for it. Likewise, a majority
of commenters opposed the proposed adoption of a procedure for updating
a customer's Registered Location information that would require
Internetbased TRS callers to acknowledge their location at the
beginning of every call, a minority of commenters expressed qualified
support for such a requirement, provided that a user is offered the
option to update his or her location at the start of each call, but
then need not do anything if there has been no change in the caller's previously registered location.
7. On November 15, 2006, the Commission held an E911 disability access summit (E911 Summit) to discuss advances in E911 calling technology and E911 access for persons with hearing and speech disabilities, including via VRS and IP Relay. FCC Releases Agenda for November 15 E911 Disability Access Summit, News Release (November 13, 2006). During the E911 Summit, Internetbased TRS providers noted that technology had not yet been developed to allow them to immediately place the outbound leg of an Internetbased TRS emergency call to the appropriate PSAP. They also explained the interim methods being used to handle emergency VRS and IP Relay calls, even though this requirement is waived.
8. In FCC 0878, the Commission takes action to ensure that users
of the Internetbased forms of TRS can better rely on these services to
make emergency calls. The Commission does not believe that the
continued waiver of the emergency call handling requirement can be
justified when balanced against the obvious public safety benefits derived from ensuring reliable 911 access.
A. Emergency Call Handling Requirements for InternetBased TRS Providers
9. In light of the present imperative to provide Internetbased TRS users a reliable means of accessing emergency services, the Commission concludes that the waivers of the emergency call handling requirement for VRS, IP Relay, and IP CTS should terminate contemporaneously with the effective date of FCC 0878 on May 21, 2008. In addition, at that time (i.e., May 21, 2008), the Commission requires VRS, IP Relay, and IP CTS providers to accept and handle emergency calls and to access, either directly or via a third party, a commercially available database that will allow the provider to determine an appropriate PSAP, designated statewide default answering point, or appropriate local emergency authority that corresponds to the caller's location, and to relay the call to that entity. Further, providers will be required to: (1) Implement a system that ensures that they answer an incoming emergency call before other nonemergency calls (i.e., prioritize emergency calls and move them to the top of the queue); (2) request, at the beginning of every emergency call, the caller's name and location information (in time, this requirement will be superseded by the Registered Location process, discussed herein); (3) deliver to the PSAP, designated statewide default answering point, or appropriate local emergency authority, at the outset of the outbound leg of the call, at a minimum, the name of the relay user and location of the emergency, as well as the name of the relay provider, the CA's callback number, and the CA's identification number, thereby enabling the PSAP, designated statewide default answering point, or appropriate local emergency authority to reestablish contact with the CA in the event the call is disconnected; and (4) in the event one or both legs of the call are disconnected (i.e., either the call between the TRS user and the CA, or the outbound voice telephone call between the CA and the PSAP, designated statewide default answering point, or appropriate local emergency authority), immediately reestablish contact with the TRS user and/or the appropriate PSAP, designated statewide default answering point, or appropriate local emergency authority and resume handling the call, when feasible. The Commission recognizes that, in some instances, the CA may not be able to call back a TRS customer using one of the Internetbased forms of TRS because the CA will not know the current IP address of the relay customer. The Commission urges Internetbased TRS providers to give their customers the option of providing an alternative method of reestablishing contact with the caller to facilitate a callback in the event that an emergency call is disconnected. The Commission also notes that, in this context, providers are expressly permitted to contact consumers directly, notwithstanding any prohibitions regarding contacts with consumers as described in other Commission orders. See, e.g., Telecommunications Relay Services and SpeechtoSpeech Services for Individuals with Hearing and Speech Disabilities, CG Docket No. 03123, Report and Order and Declaratory Ruling, FCC 07186, paragraph 95 (November 19, 2007), published at 73 FR 3197, January 17, 2008 (placing restrictions on use of consumer or call database information to contact TRS users).
10. Based on the record in this proceeding, which reflects that some providers have already implemented some of these measures, the Commission believes it is reasonable for all providers to comply with these requirements by the effective date announced here. The Commission affirms that providers' costs of compliance with FCC 0878 are compensable from the Interstate TRS Fund as part of providing TRS service in compliance with the mandatory minimum standards. The Commission reminds providers, however, that costs are not recoverable for meeting waived mandatory minimum standards. See, e.g., Telecommunications Relay Services and SpeechtoSpeech Services for Individuals With Hearing and Speech Disabilities, CG Docket No. 03123, Order on Reconsideration, 21 FCC Rcd 8050, 8057, paragraph 15 (July 12, 2006) (2006 TRS Order on Reconsideration), published at 71 FR 47141, August 16, 2006. The Commission amends its rules to reflect these new requirements.
11. In the event that a relay caller is incapacitated or is
otherwise unable or unwilling to provide their name and location, the
provider should use best efforts to obtain it, including providing to
an appropriate PSAP, designated statewide answering point, or
appropriate local emergency authority, any location information that a
customer may have on file with the provider in connection with his or
her ``customer profile.'' The Commission notes that some (but not all) TRS consumers file customer profiles
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detailing the customer's preferences with respect to particular aspects
of a provider's relay service (e.g., designating a preference regarding
the gender of the CA who relays the customer's TRS calls). To the
extent that the customer profile includes location information, this
information may assist a CA in identifying an appropriate PSAP,
designated statewide answering point, or appropriate local emergency
authority. (The Commission emphasizes that a provider must use best
efforts to handle an emergency call and place the outbound leg of such
a call, even if the calling party refuses to provide his or her
identity.) Further, on an interim basis, the requirement to deliver
emergency calls permits VRS, IP Relay, and IP CTS providers to route
911 calls to PSAPs' tendigit administrative lines. Upon the effective
date of the forthcoming Registered Location requirement discussed
herein, however, all Internetbased TRS calls must be routed through
the Wireline E911 Network. See VoIP 911 Order, 20 FCC Rcd at 10270
paragraph 42 and note 142 (requiring interconnected VoIP providers to
transmit 911 calls to the appropriate PSAP via the Wireline E911 Network).
12. The Commission recognizes that there are different ways by which providers may ensure that emergency calls receive priority handling and are not put in a queue with all incoming calls to wait for an available CA to handle the call. Some providers note, for example, that they would use a separate IP access address dedicated for emergency calls only. The Commission does not mandate a specific means by which providers must give priority to, and answer, emergency calls, so long as such calls are handled in accordance with the requirements set forth above.
13. The Commission's Consumer & Governmental Affairs Bureau has previously advised TRS providers of their obligation to handle incoming calls in the order in which they are received. See FCC Clarifies that Certain TRS Marketing and Call Handling Practices are Improper, CC Docket No. 9867, CG Docket No. 03123, Public Notice, DA 05141 (released January 26, 2005), at 3, published at 70 FR 8034, February 17, 2005. The Bureau issued this advisory in response to complaints that certain TRS providers were selectively handling nonemergency calls placed by preferred customers ahead of nonemergency calls placed by other, nonpreferred customers. In that context, the Bureau determined that the selective handling of incoming calls was improper and inconsistent with the notion of functional equivalency. The Commission clarifies here that the obligation to handle incoming calls in the order in which they are received applies to nonemergency calls only and that, under the call handling rules the Commission adopts, providers are under an affirmative obligation to ensure that emergency calls receive priority handling. Because of the importance of emergency call handling, the Commission expects that providers will ensure adequate staffing of emergency call handling processes so that CAs are not required to disconnect nonemergency calls in order to process emergency calls.
14. Based on the record before us, it appears that some Internet based TRS providers presently accept and handle emergency calls made via VRS or IP Relay by asking the caller for location and other essential information necessary to identify, and make the outbound call to, an appropriate PSAP. In this regard, several VRS providers assert that as long as the providers obtain the location information from the calling party, they can route the call to an appropriate PSAP based upon PSAP databases that are commercially available.
15. In conjunction with the requirement that a CA request, at the beginning of an emergency call, the name and location information of the relay user placing the call, the Commission permits a CA to memorialize the caller's name and location information in writing for the purposes of communicating this information to an appropriate PSAP, designated statewide default answering point, or appropriate local emergency authority, and facilitating access to emergency services. The Commission also permits a CA to retain such information after the call, where necessary to facilitate the dispatch of emergency services or for other emergency (e.g., where a relay caller becomes incapacitated while placing a relay call) or law enforcement purposes. The Commission notes that section 225(d)(1)(F) of the Act and Sec. 64.604(a)(2) of the Commission's TRS rules generally prohibit a CA from keeping records of the ``content'' of a relay conversation beyond the duration of a call. See 47 U.S.C. 225(d)(1)(F) of the Act (instructing the Commission to prescribe regulations prohibiting relay operators from keeping records of the content of any conversation beyond the duration of the call); 47 CFR 64.604(a)(2)(i) of the Commission's rules (prohibiting relay operators from keeping records of the content of any conversation beyond the duration of the call). With respect to these provisions, the Commission concludes that the ``content'' of a relayed conversation reasonably does not include basic identifying information, such as the name and present location of an emergency TRS caller. Consistent with this interpretation, the Commission permits a CA to memorialize in writing, and retain records pertaining to, the name and location of a consumer who places an emergency call via an Internetbased TRS provider. The Commission reminds providers, however, that even this information may be made available only to emergency call handlers, and emergency response or law enforcement personnel solely for the purpose of ascertaining a customer's location in an emergency situation or for other emergency or law enforcement purposes.
16. Finally, the Commission notes that at least two Internetbased
TRS providers have requested that the Commission exempt these providers
from liability resulting from their handling of emergency TRS calls to
the same extent Congress has insulated wireline and wireless carriers
from liability in connection with those carriers' handling of emergency
911 and E911 calls. As the Commission stated in the interconnected VoIP
context, before it would consider taking any action to preempt
liability under state law, the Commission would need to demonstrate
that limiting liability is ``essential to achieving the goals of the
Act.'' To its knowledge, no commenter contends here that such action is
``essential'' to achieving the goals of the Act. Nor has any commenter
identified a source of authority for providing liability protection to
Internetbased TRS providers. For the reasons the Commission denied
requests to limit the liability of interconnected VoIP providers in the
VoIP 911 Order, the Commission similarly declines to limit the
liability of Internetbased TRS providers in connection with their
handling of emergency TRS calls. VoIP 911 Order, 20 FCC Rcd at 10275,
paragraph 54 (noting that Congress had enacted no liability protection
for interconnected VoIP providers, the Commission declined to adopt
such protections and would not consider doing so unless such action
were deemed to be ``essential to achieving the goals of the Act'').
Although Congress has provided limited liability protections to local
exchange carriers and wireless carriers, it has not done so for
Internetbased TRS providers. See Wireless Communications and Public
Safety Act of 1999, Public Law 10681, 113 Stat. 1286 (1999) (911 Act); 47
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U.S.C. 615a; 911 Act section 4 (providing wireless carriers same degree
of liability protection relating to 911 service as local exchange
carriers). The Commission notes that in the VoIP 911 Order, the
Commission advised interconnected VoIP providers seeking to protect
themselves from liability for negligence to do so through ``their
customer contracts and through their agreements with PSAPs, as some
interconnected VoIP providers have done.'' Nothing in FCC 0878
prevents Internetbased TRS providers from taking similar actions. In
particular, nothing the Commission does here would prevent a TRS
provider from incorporating into their consumer notification or future
registration processes described herein, the same protections that
interconnected VoIP providers typically include in their subscription agreements with consumers.
17. As noted above, the Commission is adopting these requirements
to help facilitate access to emergency services for consumers of
Internetbased relay services, pending the adoption of a longer term
solution. These requirements will become effective May 21, 2008, and
the Commission extends the present VRS and IP Relay emergency call
handling waivers, previously scheduled to expire after December 31,
2007, such that those waivers, along with the IP CTS emergency call handling waiver, will remain in effect until May 21, 2008.
B. Transition to Additional E911 Capabilities for InternetBased Forms of TRS
18. The Commission believes that the use of a Registered Location process, similar to that adopted in the VoIP 911 Order, constitutes an additional critical component of an E911 solution for Internetbased TRS providers, so that a CA may promptly determine an appropriate PSAP, designated statewide default answering point, or appropriate local emergency authority to call to respond to the emergency. Accordingly, as the Commission requires of all interconnected VoIP providers, the Commission will require in a forthcoming order that all Internetbased TRS providers obtain or have access to consumer location information for the purposes of emergency calling requirements.
19. As the Commission has stated previously, the goal of its E911 rules is to provide meaningful location information to first responders, regardless of the technology or platform employed. See, e.g., 2007 Wireless E911 NPRM, 22 FCC Rcd at 10609, paragraph 6. Public safety officials need to receive accurate and timely information concerning the current location of an individual who places an emergency call, notwithstanding the platform or technology used by the provider or the means by which the individual places the call. The Commission believes that user registration is critical to achieving the goal of providing location identification to first responders in the context of emergency calls placed over Internetbased TRS. As noted above, providers' costs of compliance with FCC 0878 are compensable from the Interstate TRS Fund as part of providing TRS service in compliance with the mandatory minimum standards, but costs associated with meeting waived mandatory minimum standards are not recoverable from the fund. Accordingly, the registration process the Commission outlines today, in large part, will be guided by the manner in which interconnected VoIP providers obtain location information of interconnected VoIP users pursuant to the Commission's VoIP 911 Order. However, the Commission recognizes, as some commenters have noted, that there are differences between interconnected VoIP services and Internetbased TRS that must be addressed in adopting a registration process for Internetbased TRS users. For example, while interconnected VoIP subscribers receive a tendigit telephone number in conjunction with the service, Internetbased TRS users currently do not. Accordingly, the Commission will adopt a tendigit numbering plan in a future Commission order that ties numbering to the registration process and renders relay providers' situation more analogous to that of interconnected VoIP providers.
20. The Commission plans to move forward on adopting a tendigit numbering plan in an expeditious manner. Specifically, simultaneously with the Commission's release of FCC 0878, the Commission's Consumer & Governmental Affairs Bureau is releasing a public notice seeking to refresh the record on relay service numbering issues. See 2008 Numbering PN. The Commission plans to hold a stakeholder workshop immediately following the release of these items. The Commission commits to completing a final order on a tendigit numbering plan in the second quarter of this year. In order to provide stakeholders sufficient time to implement these rules, the Commission will require that the tendigit numbering plan be implemented no later than December 31, 2008.
21. Consumer Notification Requirement. VRS providers currently are required to include ``a clear and bold written statement on their web site and promotional materials explaining the shortcomings and potential dangers of using VRS to place an emergency call'' so that those making a 911 call over TRS facilities understand the implications of making such a call, particularly in the context of the Commission's encouragement to TRS users to access emergency services directly. In the VoIP 911 Order, the Commission required interconnected VoIP service providers to ``specifically advise every subscriber, both new and existing, prominently and in plain language, [of] the circumstances under which E911 service may not be available.'' VoIP 911 Order, 20 FCC Rcd at 10272, paragraph 48. The Commission also required interconnected VoIP providers to ``obtain and keep a record of affirmative acknowledgement by every subscriber, both new and existing, of having received and understood this advisory'' and to distribute labels ``warning subscribers if E911 service may be limited or not available and instructing the subscriber to place them on and/or near the CPE used in conjunction with the interconnected VoIP service.'' In light of these requirements for interconnected VoIP providers, the Commission's VRS/IP Relay 911 NPRM sought comment on whether the Commission's current consumer notification requirements for Internetbased TRS providers should be revised, for example, to require that providers specifically advise new and existing subscribers of the circumstances under which E911 service may not be available through Internetbased forms of TRS or may be in some way limited by comparison to traditional E911 service. VRS/IP Relay 911 NPRM, 20 FCC Rcd at 19486, paragraph 22. The Commission also sought comment on whether Internetbased TRS providers should be required to provide appropriate warning labels for installation on CPE used in connection with Internetbased relay services or to obtain and keep a record of affirmative acknowledgement by every subscriber of having received and understood this advisory.
22. Consistent with the VoIP 911 Order, the Commission requires
each Internetbased TRS provider, if not already doing so, to include
an advisory on its Web site and in any promotional materials directed
to consumers, prominently and in plain language, explaining the
circumstances under which emergency calls made via Internetbased TRS may be in some way
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limited by comparison to traditional E911 service. The Commission
believes it is important to caution consumers of the limitations of
using the Internetbased forms of TRS to make emergency calls in the
event that a caller does place an emergency call via an Internetbased
relay service. In addition, the Commission may address additional
consumer notification requirements in a forthcoming order, consistent
with the consumer notification requirements adopted in the VoIP 911 Order, as appropriate.
23. Enhanced 911 Service. In the VoIP 911 Order, the Commission required interconnected VoIP providers to transmit all E911 calls to the appropriate PSAP, designated statewide answering point, or appropriate local emergency authority via the Wireline E911 Network, and prohibited the use of socalled tendigit ``administrative numbers.'' See VoIP 911 Order, 20 FCC Rcd at 1026669, paragraphs 3741 (requiring interconnected VoIP providers to transmit all E911 calls via the Wireline E911 Network). The Commission defined ``Wireline E911 Network'' as a ``dedicated wireline network that (1) is interconnected with but largely separate from the public switched telephone network, (2) includes a selective router, and (3) is utilized to route emergency calls and related information to PSAPs, designated statewide default answering points, appropriate local emergency authorities or other emergency answering points.'' 47 CFR 9.3 of the Commission's rules (defining Wireline E911 Network). In a typical implementation, the Wireline E911 Network includes the Selective Router, which receives 911 calls from competitive and incumbent LEC central offices over dedicated trunks. The Selective Router, after querying an incumbent LEC maintained Selective Router Database (SRDB) to determine which PSAP serves the caller's geographic area, forwards the calls to the PSAP that has been designated to serve the caller's area, along with the caller's phone number (ANI). The PSAP then forwards the caller's ANI to an incumbent LEC maintained Automatic Location Information database (ALI Database), which returns the caller's physical address (that has previously been verified by comparison to a separate database known as the Master Street Address Guide (MSAG)). The Wireline E911 Network thus consists of: the Selective Router; the trunk line(s) between the Selective Router and the PSAP; the ALI Database; the SRDB; the trunk line(s) between the ALI database and the PSAP; and the MSAG. VoIP 911 Order, 20 FCC Rcd at 10252, paragraph 15 (citations omitted). The Commission required that all interconnected VoIP calls be routed through the dedicated Wireline E911 Network based on evidence in the record that use of tendigit administrative numbers for routing E911 calls is not in the public interest to the extent that these numbers are not as reliable or consistently staffed as Wireline E911 Network call centers.
24. Consistent with the VoIP 911 Order, the Commission expects that a forthcoming order will require that, upon the effective date of the forthcoming Registered Location requirement, an Internetbased TRS provider must transmit all 911 calls via the dedicated Wireline E911 Network, and the Registered Location must be available from or through the ALI Database. By requiring that all 911 calls be routed via the dedicated Wireline E911 Network, Internetbased TRS service providers would provide E911 service in those areas where Selective Routers are utilized and they would provide such call back and location information as a PSAP, designated statewide default answering point, or appropriate local emergency authority is capable of receiving and utilizing. The Commission expects that providers will be able to use much of the same infrastructure and technology that is already in place for the delivery of 911 calls by interconnected VoIP service providers.
25. Because of the importance of emergency call handling for all Americans, in FCC 0878, the Commission adopts interim emergency call handling requirements for Internetbased TRS providers. These measures will ensure that persons using Internetbased forms of TRS can promptly access emergency services pending the development of a technological solution that will permit Internetbased TRS providers to automatically determine the geographic location of the consumer and place the outbound leg of an emergency call to an appropriate PSAP, designated statewide default answering point, or appropriate local emergency authority. These actions reinforce the Commission's longstanding and continuing commitment to make available a nationwide communications system that promotes the safety and welfare of all Americans, including individuals with hearing and speech disabilities.
26. The Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980, as amended (RFA), requires that a regulatory flexibility analysis be prepared for rulemaking proceedings, unless the agency certifies that ``the rule will not, if promulgated, have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.'' 5 U.S.C. 605(b). The RFA generally defines ``small entity'' as having the same meaning as the terms ``small business,'' ``small organization,'' and ``small governmental jurisdiction.'' 5 U.S.C. 601(6). In addition, the term ``small business'' has the same meaning as the term ``small business concern'' under the Small Business Act. 5 U.S.C. 601(3) (incorporating by reference the definition of ``small business concern'' in Small Business Act, 15 U.S.C. 632). Pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 601(3), the statutory definition of a small business applies ``unless an agency, after consultation with the Office of Advocacy of the Small Business Administration and after opportunity for public comment, establishes one or more definitions of such term which are appropriate to the activities of the agency. A small business concern is one which: (1) Is independently owned and operated; (2) is not dominant in its field of operation; and (3) satisfies any additional criteria established by the Small Business Administration (SBA). Small Business Act, 15 U.S.C. 632.
27. FCC 0878 adopts emergency call handling requirements for
Internetbased TRS providers. These measures will ensure that persons
using Internetbased TRS services can promptly access emergency
services. The Commission requires VRS, IP Relay, and IP CTS providers
to accept and handle emergency calls and to access, either directly or
via a third party, a commercially available database that will allow
the provider to determine an appropriate PSAP, designated statewide
default answering point, or appropriate local emergency authority that
corresponds to the caller's location, and to relay the call to that
entity. Further, FCC 0878 requires that providers: (1) Implement a
system that ensures that providers answer an incoming emergency call
before other nonemergency calls; (2) request, at the beginning of
every emergency call, the caller's name and location information; (3)
deliver to the PSAP, designated statewide default answering point, or
appropriate local emergency authority, at the outset of the outbound
leg of the call, at a minimum, the name of the relay user and location of the
[[Page 21258]]
emergency, as well as the name of the relay provider, the CA's callback
number, and the CA's identification number, thereby enabling the PSAP,
designated statewide default answering point, or appropriate local
emergency authority to reestablish contact with the CA in the event
the call is disconnected; and (4) in the event one or both legs of the
call are disconnected, immediately reestablish contact with the TRS
user and/or the appropriate PSAP, designated statewide default
answering point, or appropriate local emergency authority and resume
handling the call, when feasible. Finally, FCC 0878 requires each
Internetbased TRS provider to include an advisory on its web site and
in any promotional materials directed to consumers, prominently and in
plain language, explaining the circumstances under which emergency
calls made via Internetbased TRS may be in some way limited by comparison to traditional E911 service.
28. To the extent that all Internetbased TRS providers, including small entities, will be eligible to receive compensation from the Interstate TRS Fund for their reasonable costs of complying with these emergency call handling and consumer notification requirements, the Commission finds that these requirements will not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities. The Commission also believes it is reasonable for Internetbased TRS providers to comply with these requirements by May 21, 2008 because based on the record in this proceeding, some providers have already implemented some of these measures. For instance, several providers assert that as long as the providers obtain location information from the calling party, they can route an emergency call to an appropriate PSAP based upon PSAP databases that are commercially available. The Commission infers that, if such voluntary steps had been unduly economically burdensome for small entities, such entities would not have undertaken them voluntarily. For all of these reasons, the Commission concludes that these measures will not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small businesses.
29. With regard to whether a substantial number of small entities may be affected by the requirements adopted in FCC 0878, the Commission notes that, of the 11 providers affected by FCC 0878, only three meet the definition of a small entity. The SBA has developed a small business size standard for Wired Telecommunications Carriers, which consist of all such firms having 1,500 or fewer employees. 13 CFR 121.201, NAICS code 517110. According to Census Bureau data for 1997, there were 2,225 firms in this category which operated for the entire year. U.S. Census Bureau, 1997 Economic Census, Subject Series: Information, ``Establishment and Firm Size (Including Legal Form of Organization),'' Table 5, NAICS code 513310 (issued October 2000). Of this total, 2,201 firms had employment of 999 or fewer employees, and an additional 24 firms had employment of 1,000 employees or more. Thus, under this size standard, the majority of firms can be considered small. (The census data do not provide a more precise estimate of the number of firms that have employment of 1,500 or fewer employees; the largest category provided is ``Firms with 1,000 employees or more.'') Currently, eleven providers receive compensation from the Interstate TRS Fund for providing VRS, IP Relay and IP CTS: AT&T Corp.; Communication Access Center for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing, Inc.; GoAmerica; Hamilton Relay, Inc.; Hands On; Healinc; Nordia Inc.; Snap Telecommunications, Inc; Sorenson; Sprint; and Verizon. Because only three of the providers affected by FCC 0878 are deemed to be small entities under the SBA's small business size standard, the Commission concludes that the number of small entities affected by its decision in FCC 0878 is not substantial. Moreover, given that all affected providers, including the three that are deemed to be small entities under the SBA's standard, will be entitled to receive prompt reimbursement for their reasonable costs of compliance, the Commission concludes that FCC 0878 will not have a significant economic impact on these small entities.
30. Therefore, for all of the reasons stated above, the Commission certifies that the requirements of FCC 0878 will not have a significant economic impact on any small entities.
31. The Commission will send a copy of FCC 0878, including a copy of this Final Regulatory Flexibility Certification, in a report to Congress pursuant to the Congressional Review Act. In addition, FCC 08 78 and this final certification will be sent to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the SBA.
The Commission will send a copy of FCC 0878 in a report to be sent to Congress and the Government Accountability Office pursuant to the Congressional Review Act, see 5 U.S.C. 801(a)(1)(A).
Pursuant to sections 1, 2, and 225 of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C. 151, 152, and 225, FCC 0878 is adopted.
Pursuant to sections 1, 2, and 225 of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C. 151, 152, and 225, part 64 of the Commission's rules, 47 CFR part 64 is amended.
FCC 0878 shall become effective May 21, 2008. The waivers of the emergency call handling requirement for VRS and IP Relay providers are extended until the effective date of FCC 0878, and, along with the waiver for IP CTS providers, shall terminate on May 21, 2008.
The Commission's Consumer & Governmental Affairs Bureau, Reference Information Center, shall send a copy of FCC 0878, including the Final Regulatory Flexibility Certification, to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small Business Administration.
Individuals with disabilities, Telecommunications. Federal Communications Commission.
Marlene H. Dortch,
Secretary.
Rule Changes
For the reasons discussed in the preamble, the Federal Communications Commission amends 47 CFR part 64 as follows:
PART 64MISCELLANEOUS RULES RELATING TO COMMON CARRIERS
1. The authority citation for part 64 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 47 U.S.C. 154, 254 (k); secs. 403 (b)(2)(B), (c),
Pub. L. 104104, 110 Stat. 56. Interpret or apply 47 U.S.C. 201,
218, 222, 225, 226, 228, and 254(k) unless otherwise noted. Sec. Sec. 64.603 and 64.604 [Amended]
2. Remove the internal crossreferences to ``Sec. 64.605'' and add in its place ``Sec. 64.606'' in the following locations:
(a) 64.603(a)
(b) 64.603(b)
(c) 64.604(c)(5)(ii)
(d) 64.604(c)(5)(iii)(F)(1)
(e) 64.604(c)(5)(iii)(F)(4)
(f) 64.604(c)(6)(i)
(g) 64.604(c)(6)(iii)(B)
3. Section 64.604 is amended by revising paragraph (a)(4) to read as follows:
Sec. 64.604 Mandatory Minimum Standards.
* * * * *
[[Page 21259]]
(a) * * *
(4) Emergency call handling requirements for TTYbased TRS
providers. TTYbased TRS providers must use a system for incoming
emergency calls that, at a minimum, automatically and immediately
transfers the caller to an appropriate Public Safety Answering Point
(PSAP). An appropriate PSAP is either a PSAP that the caller would have
reached if he had dialed 911 directly, or a PSAP that is capable of
enabling the dispatch of emergency services to the caller in an expeditious manner.
* * * * *
Sec. Sec. 64.605 through 64.608 [Redesignated as Sec. Sec. 64.606 through 64.609]
4. Sections 64.605, 64.606, 64.607, and 64.608 are redesignated as
Sec. Sec. 64.606, 64.607, 64.608, and 64.609, and a new Sec. Sec. 64.605 is added as follows:
Sec. 64.605 Additional Operational Standards Applicable to Internet Based TRS Providers.
Each VRS, IP Relay, and IP CTS provider must accept and handle
emergency calls and access, either directly or via a third party, a
commercially available database that will allow the provider to
determine an appropriate PSAP, designated statewide default answering
point, or appropriate local emergency authority that corresponds to the
caller's location, and to relay the call to that entity. The terms
PSAP, statewide default answering point, and appropriate local
emergency authority are defined in Sec. 9.3 of this chapter. Each VRS, IP Relay, and IP CTS provider also is required to:
(a) Implement a system that ensures that the provider answers an
incoming emergency call before other nonemergency calls (i.e.,
prioritize emergency calls and move them to the top of the queue);
(b) Request, at the beginning of each emergency call, the caller's name and location information;
(c) Deliver to the PSAP, designated statewide default answering
point, or appropriate local emergency authority, at the outset of the
outbound leg of an emergency call, at a minimum, the name of the relay
user and location of the emergency, as well as the name of the relay
provider, the CA's callback number, and the CA's identification number,
thereby enabling the PSAP, designated statewide default answering
point, or appropriate local emergency authority to reestablish contact with the CA in the event the call is disconnected; and
(d) In the event one or both legs of an emergency call are
disconnected (i.e., either the call between the TRS user and the CA, or
the outbound voice telephone call between the CA and the PSAP,
designated statewide default answering point, or appropriate local
emergency authority), immediately reestablish contact with the TRS
user and/or the appropriate PSAP, designated statewide default
answering point, or appropriate local emergency authority and resume handling the call, when feasible;
(e) Ensure that information obtained as a result of this section is
limited to that needed to facilitate 911 services, is made available
only to emergency call handlers and emergency response or law
enforcement personnel, and is used for the sole purpose of ascertaining
a customer's location in an emergency situation or for other emergency or law enforcement purposes.
* * * * *
Sec. 64.609 [Amended]
5. In the text of the newly redesignated Sec. 64.609, remove the
internal crossreference to ``Sec. Sec. 64.606 and 64.607'' and add in its place ``Sec. Sec. 64.607 and 64.608.''
[FR Doc. E88597 Filed 41808; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 671201P
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT Thomas Chandler, Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau, Disability Rights Office at (202) 4181475 (voice), (202) 4180597 (TTY), or email at Thomas.Chandler@fcc.gov.
14 CFR Part 39 40 CFR Part 52 14 CFR Part 71 33 CFR Part 165 50 CFR Part 679 26 CFR Part 1 40 CFR Part 180 47 CFR Part 73 50 CFR Part 17 33 CFR Part 117 44 CFR Part 67 50 CFR Part 648 14 CFR Part 97 33 CFR Part 100 40 CFR Part 63 26 CFR Part 301 50 CFR Part 622 39 CFR Part 111 40 CFR Part 300 44 CFR Part 65 50 CFR Part 660 40 CFR Part 271 40 CFR Parts 52 and 81 47 CFR Part 64 50 CFR Part 665 49 CFR Part 571 44 CFR Part 64 21 CFR Part 522 14 CFR Part 23 47 CFR Part 76