Communications Litigation Today was a Warren News publication.

Congress should enact national technology-neutral liability protection for...

Congress should enact national technology-neutral liability protection for all stakeholders involved in emergency services access, such as next-generation 911, and work to consolidate and “regionalize” 911 call centers to help guarantee consistent consumer expectations, CTIA Executive Vice President Chris Guttman-McCabe plans to tell the Senate Communications Subcommittee Thursday, according to his written testimony. The subcommittee is holding a hearing on wireless 911 location accuracy at 10:30 a.m. in 253 Russell. Other witnesses are Trey Forgety, National Emergency Number Association director-government affairs ; APCO International President Gigi Smith; Telecommunications for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing Executive Director Claude Stout; and Qualcomm Senior Director-Technology Kirk Burroughs. “The current liability protection framework is premised on protections available to legacy telephone networks under state law and regulations, but the industry is rapidly evolving to IP-based technologies in which services are diverse, increasingly mobile, and potentially multi-jurisdictional,” Guttman-McCabe plans to say. He plans to cite proactive efforts of the wireless industry in bettering emergency services, such as the voluntary carrier commitment to offer text-to-911 services by mid-2014 as well as its work with the Communications Security, Reliability and Interoperability Council. In his testimony, he laments what’s happening to states’ 911 funding. “The diversion of these fees is unacceptable and CTIA urges Congress to use every tool at its disposal to halt the practice of raiding 911 funds,” his testimony says. Congress should also “examine the potential intellectual property implications associated with the deployment of E911 and NG911 capabilities,” he will add.