Source: http://delcode.delaware.gov/sessionlaws/ga141/chp115.shtml
Timestamp: 2018-06-20 02:16:52
Document Index: 774961252

Matched Legal Cases: ['§ 10001', '§ 10002', '§ 151', '§ 10004', '§ 10004', '§ 10005', '§10005', '§ 10007', '§10007', '§ 10008', '§10009', '§ 10010', '§ 10101', '§ 10101', '§ 10102', '§ 10002', '§ 10002', '§10002', '§ 10002', '§ 10002', '§ 10103', '§ 10103', '§ 10103', '§ 10103', '§ 10104']

WHEREAS, an integrated wireline and wireless Enhanced 911 (“E-911”) Statewide emergency communications service, which automatically routes a wireline or wireless call to the appropriate answering location and which subsequently provides a display of a caller's telephone number and location, would further the safety, health, and welfare of the State's citizens and would assist in saving the lives of the people of Delaware; and
WHEREAS, the implementation of wireless E-911 emergency calling service is feasible and should be implemented; and
WHEREAS, the goal of the integrated wireline and wireless E-911 program is to enable the orderly development, installation, and operation of emergency telephone communication systems Statewide; and
WHEREAS, the State should prefer methods of locating E-911 callers which respect the privilege and assure protection of personal information; and
WHEREAS, these systems are to be operated under governmental management and control for the public benefit; and
WHEREAS, all residential and business wireline and wireless telephone users benefit from the development and operation of an efficient and effective, integrated wireline and wireless E-911 emergency calling service.
Section 1. Amend § 10001 of Title 16 of the Delaware Code by deleting the word “a” between the words “establish” and “911-Enhanced” and replacing it with the phrase “an integrated wireline and wireless”.
Section 2. Amend § 10002 of Title 16 of the Delaware Code by deleting subsections (3) and (4) and inserting the following new definitions:
“(3) ‘911-Enhanced Emergency Reporting System capability’ shall mean the network and database functions required to ensure that both the 911 call and the information identifying the telephone number of the caller and associated geographic location of the caller are automatically and simultaneously forwarded to the public safety answering point.
(4) ‘E-911 State plan’ means a document to be prepared, maintained, and kept current by the Board regarding the operation, maintenance, upgrading and funding of a Statewide-integrated E-911 system.
(5) ‘Board’ means the Enhanced 911 Emergency Reporting System Service Board.
(6) ‘Commission’ shall mean the Public Service Commission.
(7) ‘Emergency Medical Dispatch (EMD) Center’ shall mean any dispatch center that receives 911 calls requesting emergency medical assistance, processes those call or dispatches emergency medical service resources.
(8) ‘FCC E-911 Order’ means all orders issued by the Federal Communications Commission pursuant to the proceeding entitled "Revision of the Commission’s Rules to Ensure Compatibility with Enhanced 911 Emergency Calling Systems" (CC Docket No. 94-102; RM-8413), or any successor proceeding, regarding the delivery of wireless automatic number identification and wireless automatic location information as of the dates and according to the other criteria established therein.
(9) ‘Fund’ means the 911 Emergency Reporting System Service Fund created by Chapter 101 of this Title.
(10) ‘Provider’ shall mean a telecommunications service provider, including a wireless provider.
(11) ‘Public safety answering point’ or ‘PSAP’ shall have the same meaning as ‘911-Enhanced Report Center.’
(12) ‘Secretary’ shall mean the Secretary of the Department of Public Safety.
(13) ‘Wireless automatic location information’ means the delivery or receipt of the approximate geographic location, as specified in the FCC E-911 Order, of the wireless device being used to place a call to a 911 system or to a wireless E-911 system.
(14) ‘Wireless automatic number identification’ means the delivery or receipt of the telephone number when available assigned to the wireless device being used to place a call to a 911 system or to a wireless E-911 system.
(15) ‘Wireless E-911 system’ means an E-911 system which permits wireless service users dialing 911 to be connected to a public safety answering point for the reporting of police, fire, medical or other emergency situations and which permits the wireless number identification and/or associated location information to be automatically forwarded at the same time to the public safety answering point.
(16) ‘Wireless E-911 service’ means enhanced 911 service provided by a wireless provider, pursuant to the FCC E-911 Order.
(17) ‘Wireless E-911 State plan’ or ‘wireless plan’ means a document to be prepared, maintained, and kept current by the Board providing for all aspects of the development, implementation, operation, and maintenance of a Statewide wireless E-911 system, including the exclusive authority to approve wireless provider service agreements, advise regarding technical standards, formulate technical plans and determine permitted uses of and amounts disbursed from the 911-Enhanced Emergency Reporting Fund to wireless carriers as of January 1, 2002 pursuant to Section 10104 of Title 16 of the Delaware Code .
(18) ‘ Wireless provider’ means a person engaged in the business of providing wireless service to end-use customers and resellers of such service in this State.
(19) ‘Wireless service’ means commercial mobile radio service as defined under sections 3(27) and 332(d) of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended by the Federal Telecommunications Act of 1996 (47 U.S.C. § 151 et seq.).
(20) ‘Wireless service customer’ means a person who is billed by a wireless provider for wireless service within the State.
(21) ‘Wireline’ means telecommunications service provided in part over fixed physical access facilities, such as wires and cables, between residences or businesses and a telephone company switching office.”.
Section 3. Amend § 10004(a) and (b) of Title 16 by inserting the word “wireline” after the word “supplying” and before the word “telephone” in both subsections.
Section 4. Amend § 10004 of Title 16 by inserting a new subsection (c) as follows:
“(c) The Public Service Commission shall review telephone rates charged by any provider which as of June 1, 2001 had E-911 costs embedded in such rates and shall assure that such rates are adjusted as of January 1, 2002 to account for the removal of the embedded costs from them.”.
Section 5. Amend § 10005 of Title 16 by deleting it in its entirety and inserting the following:
“§10005. Creation of Enhanced 911 Emergency Service Board.
(a) There is hereby established an Enhanced 911 Emergency Reporting System Service Board.
(b) The Board shall act in an advisory capacity to the Governor, the Secretary and the General Assembly on all matters related to the E-911 system, service and funding thereof.
(c) The Board shall be comprised of 7 members appointed by the Governor with the advice and consent of the Senate. The Governor shall designate a chairperson who shall serve an unlimited term at the pleasure of the Governor. At least 3 members shall have technical or financial expertise on telecommunications issues and at least one member shall be a representative from the Delaware Association of County Governments. The term of each member, excluding the chairperson who shall serve at the pleasure of the Governor, shall be for 3 years except that for the initial members of the Board, 2 members shall be appointed for a term of 1 year, 2 members shall be appointed for a term of 2 years, and 2 members shall be appointed for a term of 3 years.
(d) Members of the Board shall serve without compensation except that they shall be reimbursed for reasonable and necessary expenses incidental to their duties as members of the Board.
(e) The Department of Public Safety shall provide administrative support to the Board and may seek reimbursement from the Fund for reasonable costs incurred with administering the Board and Fund.
(f) The Board’s duties and responsibilities shall include the following.
(1) The Board shall develop and adopt a comprehensive E-911 State plan by November 1, 2001 which shall cover a period of not less than 3 years and which shall include a wireless E-911 State plan. The plan shall be reviewed, updated and prioritized on an annual basis.
(2) No later than March 1 of each year, beginning in 2002, the Board shall provide an annual report to the Governor, Secretary, Office of Information Services, or its successor agency, and General Assembly, which shall, at a minimum, include a summary of the progress on the wireless E-911 system, an evaluation of the E-911 system as a whole, the capital improvements and expenditures proposed for the upcoming fiscal year, expected revenues from the surcharges in the next fiscal year, and a summary of the revenues and expenses for the prior fiscal year. In no event shall the proposed annual expenses associated with the E-911 system exceed the anticipated annual revenues of the Fund.
(3) The Board shall develop, evaluate, establish, recommend, and adopt a wireless E-911 State plan pursuant to the FCC E-911 Order. The wireless plan shall cover a period of not less than 3 years and shall provide for the systematic deployment of wireless E-911 service across the State.
(4) The Board shall conduct a public meeting in each of the three counties in this State prior to the adoption of the E-911 State plan and the wireless E-911 State plan.
(5) When the wireless E-911 State plan is fully implemented, the Board shall insure that wireless service in all communities is or can be selectively routed to one or more public safety answering points.
(6) The Board shall conduct a comprehensive review of the entire E-911 system no later than November 15, 2004, and every 3 years thereafter, and make a written report on its findings and recommendations regarding the adequacy of the System, service thereunder and funding to the Governor, Secretary, Office of Information Services, or its successor agency, and General Assembly. The Board is authorized to retain the services of professionals, as needed, to assist it in its duties under this subsection.
(g) Actions by the Board shall be by a majority vote of the entire membership of the Board. All voting shall be done in person and at regular or special meetings of the Board.
(h) The Board shall work in concert with the Department of Public Safety, providers, emergency service providers, counties and municipal governments offering 911 service and any other appropriate department, agency or committee focusing on Statewide emergency service affected by the development and maintenance of the E-911 System.
(i) The Board may exercise all powers and conduct such activities as are necessary in carrying out its responsibilities under this chapter and chapter 101 of this Title.
Section 6. Amend Chapter 100 of Title 16 by inserting new §§ 10007-10010 as follows:
“§10007. Compliance with Wireless E-911 Service Plan.
§ 10008. Limitation of Liability.
No person involved in the provision of E-911 or 911 service who in good faith receives, develops, collects, or processes information for the enhanced 911 data bases, relays, transfers, operates, maintains or provides enhanced 911 services or system capabilities, or provides emergency telephone and radio communications for ambulance, police, and fire departments, shall be liable for damages in any civil action for any act or omission that results in death, injury or loss to person or property unless such action or inaction constitutes gross negligence or an intentional tort.
§10009. Provider Records.
Upon request from and pursuant to a non-disclosure agreement with the Board, each provider shall provide any information requested by the Board relating to subscribers, provider-specific revenues, expenses and automatic location information. Such information shall remain the property of the provider and shall be used only to develop and implement the wireline or wireless E-911 State plans or to provide emergency response services or for any other lawful purpose. The Board shall be authorized to enter into non-disclosure agreements with providers prior to the provision of such information.
§ 10010. Confidentiality of Information and Release of Information.
(a) Identifying information of provider subscribers, provider-specific revenues and expenses, trade secrets, commercial information and other such information shall be treated as confidential and, notwithstanding other provisions of law, shall not be subject to public disclosure by the State or its representatives.
(b) No provider shall be liable for releasing subscriber information for purposes of complying with the requirements of this chapter or chapter 101 of this Title.”.
Section 7. Amend § 10101 of Title 16 of the Delaware Code by deleting it in its entirety and inserting the following:
“§ 10101. Purpose.
The State shall create a special fund designated as the Enhanced 911 Emergency Reporting System Fund which shall be used to reimburse the State, counties, local governments and providers of telecommunications services in this State for costs associated with the E-911 Emergency Reporting System.”.
Section 8. Amend § 10102 of Title 16 of the Delaware Code by deleting subsections (5) and (6) and inserting the following new definitions:
“(5) ‘Board’ shall mean the Enhanced 911 Emergency Reporting System Service Board.
(7) ‘Business telephone service’ shall mean network access telephone service where the use of such service is primarily for business purposes.
(8) ‘FCC E-911 Order’ shall have the same meaning assigned to such term in § 10002(8) of this Title.
(9) ‘Fund’ shall mean the E-911 Emergency Reporting System Fund.
(10) ‘Provider’ shall have the same meaning assigned to such term in § 10002(10) of this Title.
(11) ‘Residential telephone service’ shall mean network access telephone service where the use of such service is primarily for social or domestic purposes.
(13) ‘Wholesale services’ shall mean services that a provider furnishes to another provider, rather than to end-use customers.
(14) ‘Wireless E-911 State plan’ shall have the same meaning assigned to such term in §10002(17) of this Title.
(15) ‘Wireless provider’ shall have the same meaning assigned to such term in § 10002(18) of this Title.
(16) ‘Wireless service’ shall have the same meaning assigned to such term in § 10002(19) of this Title.”.
Section 9. Amend Chapter 101 of Title 16 of the Delaware Code by deleting § 10103 in its entirety and inserting new §§ 10103-10105 as follows:
“§ 10103. E-911 Emergency Reporting System Fund.
(a) The Fund shall be funded by means of a monthly surcharge of up to 60 cents per month imposed by providers on subscribers of telecommunications services in this State as follows.
(1) Residential telephone service. The surcharge shall be imposed by each provider providing such service on all Delaware residential subscribers per residence exchange access line or per Basic Rate Interface (“BRI”) ISDN arrangement, where the residence exchange access service is provided via a BRI ISDN arrangement. The surcharge shall not be applied to residence exchange access lines provided to Lifeline subscribers.
(2) Business telephone service. The surcharge shall be imposed by each provider providing such service on all Delaware business subscribers per business exchange access line and trunk or per BRI ISDN arrangement where the business exchange access service is provided via a BRI ISDN arrangement. Each Centrex access line shall be charged the equivalent of 1/9 of the surcharge; provided, however, that where a Centrex customer has fewer than 9 lines, the maximum monthly charge for those lines will be the surcharge imposed on each business exchange access line or trunk divided by the customer’s Centrex lines. Each Primary Rate Interface ISDN system shall be charged a rate equal to five times the surcharge. The surcharge shall not be applied to lines provided under wholesale arrangements.
(3) Wireless service. The surcharge shall be imposed by each wireless provider on all wireless service customers for each wireless telephone number for which they are billed by such provider.
(b) The surcharge amounts shall be deposited into the Fund as described below, along with any other State funds the General Assembly may from time to time appropriate.
(c) The provider shall impose the surcharge on the person purchasing the service but shall collect it on behalf of the State. The surcharges collected by a provider shall not be subject to taxes or charges levied by the State or any political subdivision thereof, nor shall they be considered revenue of the provider for any purpose.
(d) Each provider imposing the surcharge shall state such surcharge as a clearly identifiable, separate item on all subscriber invoices rendered after January 1, 2002.
(e) The surcharge shall not apply to wholesale services.
(f) All surcharges collected by providers pursuant to this chapter shall be remitted to the State and deposited in the Fund on a monthly basis. Providers utilizing multiple customer billing cycles may send a single remittance each month.
(g) Each provider collecting such surcharges shall be entitled to recover the actual incremental costs of billing, collecting and remitting such surcharges, as well as the costs of compliance with any memorandum of understanding as described in subsection (h) below, through a credit against them. This cost is defined as the additional incremental expense incurred by the provider that is in addition to the normal expense of billing and collecting the charges for the provision of the provider’s normal telephone service. Where moneys collected by the provider are equal to or less than the total charge for the telephone service provided to subscribers or customers by that provider, not including the surcharge, all moneys collected will be applied to the charges for the actual telephone service provided.
(h) Each provider collecting such surcharges shall not be responsible for uncollectable surcharges. The State may also enter into a memorandum of understanding with each provider which shall include, but need not be limited to, the terms related to the collection and distribution of funds pursuant to this chapter and provide for reporting to the Board the names and addresses of subscribers that fail to pay the surcharge. However, nothing in this chapter shall be construed to prevent the State or the Board from taking appropriate actions to collect such surcharges designated by a provider as uncollectable.
(i) Each provider collecting such surcharge is fulfilling a governmental function and in so doing is immune from suit for damages of any kind and is not liable for refunds except to the extent that the provider has failed to collect or remit surcharges to the Fund in accordance with the requirements of this chapter.
(j) The Fund is created as a non-appropriated special fund. Balances in the Fund on June 30 of each year shall carry forward and shall not revert to the General Fund.
(a) Disbursements from the Fund shall be made for the following purposes.
(1) Nonrecurring costs, including but not limited to, costs for purchasing and installing the customer premises terminal equipment (“CPE”) required to establish or upgrade public safety answering points, purchasing E-911 network equipment or upgrading equipment as required to ensure proper functioning of the E-911 service and related software, developing wireless data bases, and initial training in the use of CPE equipment.
(2) Recurring costs, including but not limited to, costs for network access fees and other telephone charges, software, equipment, data base management, maintenance and improvement, public education, language translation services, ongoing training in the use of CPE equipment and network and equipment maintenance.
(3) Expenses of the Board and the Department of Public Safety incurred under this chapter for the purposes of administering the Fund and expenses incurred in connection with the Board’s responsibilities under chapter 100 of this Title.
(b) Each county shall receive an amount from the Fund equal to 50 cents per month, less the costs identified in § 10103(g) above, for each wireline residential customer from which the monthly surcharge is collected in that county or the amount received by that county in calendar year 2000 from telephone providers from E-911 surcharges, whichever is greater. Disbursements from the Fund shall be made to the counties by the 15th day of the month following the month in which the wireline residential surcharges are deposited into the Fund by the provider. The amount disbursed to a county for any calendar year shall be subject to a true up at the end of the such year to reflect the amount received by the county in calendar year 2000 from E-911 surcharges but only in the event that such amount is greater than the amount disbursed from the Fund to the county in the current calendar year. The counties may use these revenues to offset the costs incurred by them in connection with the administration, staffing, street addressing, necessary capital equipment, and training necessary to support the provision of E-911 Emergency Reporting Service.
(c) Upon a wireless providers receipt of a request for wireless E-911 service from the State, a wireless provider also shall:
(1) Be reimbursed for any recurring costs associated with the development, implementation, operation, and maintenance of wireless E-911 service in the geographic area served.
(2) Be reimbursed for any nonrecurring costs associated with the development, implementation, operation, and maintenance of wireless E-911 service in the geographic area served.
(3) In no event shall any expenditure be reimbursed for payment of costs that are not related to a wireless provider’s compliance with requirements established by the wireless E-911 State plan and the FCC E-911 Order, or incurred at the request of the State.
(d) Disbursements may not be made for:
(1) Personnel costs for public safety answering points except as set forth in subsection (b) above.
(2) Construction, purchase, renovation or furnishings for real estate to house public safety answering points, except as set forth in subsection (b) above.
(3) Vehicles, including ambulances, fire engines or other emergency vehicles, associated equipment and utilities.
(4) Two-way radios.
(e) Pro rata sharing of Fund amounts. If the total amount of money in the Fund after paying the amounts due to the counties under § 10104(b) is insufficient to pay reimbursable costs at any given time, each entity requesting reimbursement shall receive a pro rata share of the total amount in the Fund at such time. Any remaining unpaid reimbursable costs shall be carried forward for payment as soon as sufficient funds become available.
(f) Providers may request reimbursement on a monthly basis and payments from the Fund to providers shall be made by the State Treasurer within sixty (60) days of receipt of such request.
(g) The annual expenditures from the Fund shall not exceed the annual revenues deposited into it.
The Secretary is authorized to adopt such regulations as are necessary to carry out the purpose of this chapter.”.
Section 10. Sections 1-6 and 10 of this Act shall become effective upon enactment. Sections 7-9 of this Act shall become effective on January 1, 2002.