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Cell users likely to shoulder 911 upgrade cost

Cell users likely to shoulder 911 upgrade cost

By:  Nestor E Arellano  On: 12 Jan 2009 For: IT World Canada (NA) Creator

Wireless carriers say the cost of upgrading Canada's outmoded 911 systems could run up to hundreds of millions of dollars. Analyst warn that cell callers will ultimately pay the price of the long-delayed improvements

After five years of debate and foot dragging a drastically jacked-up price tag for upgrading the country's outmoded wireless 911 systems is likely to be shouldered by Canadian cell phone users, industry watchers said.

The Canadian Radio-Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) will release next month requirements for the cell phone industry to update emergency systems so that 911 operators can locate wireless emergency calls. The ability to locate wireless 911 calls has been available in the U.S. and other parts of the world since 2005. The CRTC wants the Canadian upgrade completed by 2010.

In November, Keith McIntosh, director of regulatory affairs for the Canadian Wireless Telecommunications Association (CWTA) was quoted as saying that upgrades would probably require tens of millions of dollars in investment from wireless carriers. But last week Marc Choma, director of communications for CWTA said the actual figures could run up to "hundreds of millions of dollars."

"Figuring out the actual cost is very complicated. The expenditure will include not only the infrastructure cost but also the operation and administration, plus the cost to 911 operators who will be accepting the emergency calls," said Chroma.

He said the higher estimate includes expenses that dispatchers across the country will incur to upgrade their own equipment.

Depending on their location dispatchers are usually funded by municipal or provincial governments. "The CRTC has no identified any funding model for the upgrade," Chroma said.

Largely because of disagreement over who pays for the upgrade, Canada's 911 system lags behind those of the U.S., Europe and Asia.

When callers using landlines make a 911 call, operators can immediately trace where the call is coming from. In Canada, 911 callers need to tell the operator where they are because carriers have not made the necessary upgrades to the infrastructure that will enable cell phone signals to accurately pin-pointed.

The issue gained prominence following the recent incidents of deaths of 911 cell phone callers who might have been saved had emergency crews been able to locate them faster. Cell phone users now account for nearly half of 911 calls in Canada.

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The CRTC wants all wireless carriers to be able to offer 911 call locating capabilities on or before 2010, but there is no agreement yet from concerned parties as to how the cost will be handled. The CWTA wants public money, while the CRTC and emergency call dispatchers wants funding to come from the carriers.

Asked if public funding will be available for the upgrade, Len Katz, vice chairman of the CRTC said: "This is not a decision that the CRTC will make…It will be up to the carriers how they will introduce the changes and at what cost."


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Nestor E Arellano Nestor E Arellano Nestor Arellano – Newswire Specialist Nestor edits and posts newswire content for ITWorldCanada’s online publications and e-newsletters. Nestor joined ITWC in 2006 as a senior writer and ... more

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