The National Emergency Number Assn. (NENA) stressed Fri. it oppos...
The National Emergency Number Assn. (NENA) stressed Fri. it opposed any delay in the FCC mandate for wireless service providers using an E911 handset-based solution. NENA Thurs. released the findings of a Strategic Wireless Action Team (SWAT) effort in…
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which private sector, govt. and public safety officials examined E911 implementation (CD Feb 6 p6). Among the findings, the report recommended that performance requirements for wireless carriers focus on “near-term handset and network cell site activation” goals. It said FCC enforcement should prevent “unintended consequences” such as forced handset replacement. In a joint statement, NENA Pres. Richard Taylor and SWAT Chmn. John Melcher said Fri. that NENA opposed any delay in FCC deadlines for providers using a handset-based solutions. “NENA continues to support current FCC rules and regulations as written,” they said. They cited pending House and Senate bills that would provide additional money and accountability measures to ensure that E911 was rolled out as quickly as possible. Handset replacement has been a particularly important issue for Nextel, which last year called on the FCC to lift its Dec. 31, 2005, deadline for wireless handsets to be Phase 2 capable as long as interim benchmark dates for handset deployment were met.