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Plans Made to Connect 911 Centers Nationwide, Officials Say

The idea is to have regional hubs connected with one another through hardwire and through wireless. If a regional center has an equipment failure, 911 calls could be routed through servers in another hub and sent back to the affected center.

Plans are in the works to connect 911 dispatch centers across the state and nationwide, in an effort to help dispatchers in other regions share information more effectively.

Paul Nave, director of Owensboro-Daviess County, Ky.'s 911 dispatch center, said the plan is to connect dispatchers via the Internet, which would allow centers to transfer calls, 911 text messages, photos and videos of accident scenes and other information quickly. The ability to transfer data such as text messages already exists and is part of "Next Generation 911" technology that is being installed in dispatch centers around the country, including Daviess County.

In an emergency where a dispatch center's equipment is damaged, calls could be routed back to the local dispatchers from another 911 call center, Nave said.

"It's interesting to think we can still do the job and (use) a server 100 miles away, and it will be seamless," Nave said.

Joe Barrows, executive director of the Kentucky Commercial Radio Service Board, said 911 dispatch centers are phasing out old analog technology. The board was created in 1996 to comply with federal requirements that cell phone carriers connect their services to 911 systems. The board is also working to expand new 911 technology; one of the board's goals, according to its "Next Generation 911" plan, is to create an "IP (Internet protocol)-based network to receive, process, route and deliver all 911 calls within a State of Kentucky Managed Network."

"What's happening in the 911 world is a modernization of the 911 system that has been in place and operating on technology that is 30 years old," Barrows said. "911 is the last holdout ... for analog.

"Today, we have a lot more ways in which people communicate, (such as) texting and videos," Barrows said. "None of that is compatible with the old 911 system." With the new technology, "you'll now deliver 911 calls digitally over an emergency services network," he said.

Nave said the idea is to have regional hubs of equipment, which 911 centers will share over the Internet. The regional hubs would be connected with one another through hardwire and through wireless; if a regional center had an equipment failure, 911 calls could be routed through servers in another hub and sent back to the affected center, Nave said.

"If we have redundancy throughout the state, if I'm on the network ... and part of our infrastructure goes down, it will default to (a center in) another part of the state," Nave said.

Connecting the systems nationally will allow dispatch centers across the country to transfer 911 calls more efficiently, Nave said. For example, if a Virginia resident visiting Owensboro receives an emergency call from home, he might call 911 with the assumption that he'll reach a Virginia dispatch center, when the call will be routed to Daviess County's 911 center.

In that case, a local dispatcher will be able to route the call to the Virginia center quickly, rather than having to look up a number to call, Nave said. The system would also share GPS data, text messages and photos and video sent to 911 from smart phones, Nave said.

"We want to get rid of the ‘stovepipe systems,' which means I have my system, but it doesn't communicate with anyone else," Nave said.

Nave and Barrows both said the federal government is not requiring states to create emergency services networks, but both said they expect a federal mandate in the future.

Barrows said funding for the infrastructure improvements comes from money the state collects from monthly 911 fees on landlines and cellphones. Officials interested in expanding 911 technology are working to educate legislators about the new technology, Barrows said.

Fees from landline telephones have declined as people get rid of those phones, and the current fee on cellphones is under-collected, Barrows said. A bill to raise the amount collected on cellphones from 70 cents to one dollar for 911 centers did not pass in this year's General Assembly session.

"The process is ongoing, but hasn't culminated yet," Barrows said. "We're educating a few (legislators) at a time."

©2014 the Messenger-Inquirer (Owensboro, Ky.)