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Location! Location! The Need for Emergency Wireless Enhanced 911 Services and Comparative Policies in Canada, the United States, and Europe
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IDC |
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2009³â 10¿ù |
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102527 |
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Pages: 30 |
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Abstract
This IDC study examines emergency wireless enhanced 911 services (E911)
and approaches to implementation in several jurisdictions. Canada is "late
in the game" in adopting new regulatory rules to implement
emergency wireless enhanced 911 services. Although public safety officials applaud
the CRTC for releasing its policy on Phase II of
wireless E911 in February 2009, it has left important features
to further study in a second stage.
"This lag in adoption
will continue to impede the provision of effective location-based emergency
dispatch services to wireless users by Canadian public safety bodies,"
said Lawrence Surtees, vice president of communications research at IDC
Canada. While the CRTC must urgently establish the timelines for
the second stage, "There is also a compelling need for
the commission to take the lead to establish ongoing national
emergency wireless E911 policies and standards for the public safety
community," Mr. Surtees said.
Table of Contents
- IDC Opinion
- In This Study
- Situation Overview
- The Ascendancy of Wireless Communications: Telecom' s Big Story
- Wireless Substitution Continues to Rise
- Wireless and Public Safety
- The Need for Wireless Enhanced 911
- Network Versus Handset Solutions
- Future Outlook
- Wireless E911 Policies
- United States
- European Union
- EU Promotes Single Continent-Wide 112 Emergency Number
- Reporting and Performance Standards
- Type and Accuracy of Mobile Caller Location
- Possibility of Obtaining Registered Address of Mobile Subscribers
- Mobile Caller Location in Case of Roaming (International and National)
- Availability of 112 When Out of Coverage of Home Mobile Network
- Vehicular 112 eCall Standards
- Canada
- Essential Guidance
- Views of Select Canadian Public Safety and PSAP Officials: Challenges and Opportunities
- Importance of Wireless E911 and Adequacy of GPS-Based Location Finding
- Adequacy of CRTC Regulatory Policy on Implementing Wireless E911 in Canada
- Deferral of Phase II E911 Features (Roaming, Rebids, and Prepaid Coverage)
- Timeline for Deployment of Stage 2 Wireless Phase II E911 Features
- Need for CRTC to Specify Performance Standards and Reporting
- Policy
- Impact of Next-Generation Wireless Networks
- Conclusion
- Learn More
- Related Research
- Definitions
- Methodology
- Synopsis
- Table: Implementation of 112 in European Union
- Table: Attributes of Mobile Caller Location Identification in EU Countries
- Table: Canadian Wireless Carrier 911 Revenue, 2008
- Figure: Global Wireless Versus Fixed Telephone Line Subscribers, 19972008
- Figure: Canadian Wireless Subscribers Versus Fixed Telephone Line Customers, 20032008
- Figure: Architecture of Wireless Enhanced 911
- Figure: European Union Promotes 112 Emergency Number for Continent-Wide Wireless Roaming Access
- Figure: European Vehicular eCall System Overview
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