Telecommunications Industry News
Canadian Carriers Struggling to Implement E911 Technology
5:45 am on April 28, 2009 | Category: Business, Wireless Technology, Wireless, Cellular, Regulation
Canadian wireless carriers have started testing technology to pinpoint the physical location of 911 callers, but will face challenges in meeting the February 2010 regulatory deadline, according to Canadian Wireless Telecommunications Association president, Bernard Lord.
“It’s going to be a significant challenge to deploy this county-wide for next February,” Lord said yesterday, noting that the effort would cost “millions and millions of dollars.” Individual carriers will have to make their own decisions about whether to pass these costs on to consumers in the form of higher 911 access fees.
Canada’s telecom regulator, the CRTC, ordered cell phone companies to implement enhanced 911 technology after it became apparent that several people had died after emergency dispatchers were unable to pinpoint their exact whereabouts.
More than half of Canada’s 911 calls are now made using mobile phones.
Related Articles:
- Canadian Wireless Carriers to Implement Enhanced 911 Service
- CRTC to Require Enhanced-911 Service on Canadian Wireless Networks
- CRTC Sets February 2010 Deadline for Enhanced 911 on Mobile Networks
- Enhanced 911 Service Now Available on Canadian Wireless Networks
- CRTC to Consider Regulation of Internet Broadcasting
1 Comment »
RSS feed for comments on this post.
Leave a comment
Published by TeleClick Enterprises
Edited by Jeremy Maddock

A company in the U.S., TruePosition, has implemented a location system nationwide in the U.S. using a network-based technology to locate 911 calls. It is very high accuracy, but even works in places where GPS won’t - like indoors, in cities with tall buildings, in cars, etc. They work with AT&T and T-Mobile and some smaller companies, but it works really well in the U.S. for locating 911 calls. http://www.trueposition.com/web/guest/emergency-call-location
Comment by Calista — April 28, 2009 #