Quantcast

East Louisville News

Wednesday, December 4, 2024

CITY OF CARROLLTON: North Texas Emergency Communications Center Implements State-of-the-Art 911 System

911

City of Carrollton issued the following announcement on Dec. 11

The North Texas Emergency Communications Center, which serves the cities of Carrollton, Coppell, and Farmers Branch, as well as the Town of Addison, recently upgraded its 911 communications infrastructure to a new, all-digital NextGen911 system, the first of its kind in Texas.\

The upgraded system, which is based on the AT&T ESInet™ platform, offers an increased level of service to residents and visitors, while simultaneously saving taxpayers money. The system provides a more secure all-IP-based network with geographically diverse redundancy, more accurate location technology, and new capabilities such as sending photos and video to 911 from a mobile device in addition to text messages. Through the NextGen911 system, citizens will continue to be connected with the high quality emergency services offered throughout the area.

“Emergency communications are a vital link in connecting people with the help they need at critical moments,” NTECC Executive Director Terry Goswick said. “We needed a system that was built to carry the load of the entire Metrocrest area to ensure that when someone calls 911, they are able to reach us. In that way, this new system has been a game changer for us in providing a highly redundant system for better network resiliency.”

NTECC handles approximately 400,000 incoming and outgoing calls annually. The new 911 system ensures that every one of those callers is able to reach NTECC quickly and that precise information about a caller’s location is communicated to dispatchers immediately. Prior to the implementation of this new system, information about a caller’s location was obtained through triangulation, a process that provides a caller’s approximate geographic position based on the three towers that their cell phone pinged. Through the new system’s rapid SOS integration technology, NTECC now receives a caller’s exact location through the same means of apps like Waze and Uber.

Another feature of the system is a new automatic callback function for those who call 911 but hang up before speaking with a dispatcher. The system prompts the caller to press 1 if they meant to call 911 and 3 if not. This function is intended to reduce the volume of erroneous calls and therefore increase staff efficiency.

Using AT&T ESInet’s modern network architecture and the National Emergency Number Association’s i3 standards, the system’s call processing capacity was built to twice NTECC’s current call volume to handle unexpected spikes during times of emergency. NTECC also has access to call processing locations distributed throughout the country for backup support as needed.

NTECC has partnered with the communities of Carrollton, Addison, Coppell, and Farmers Branch since 2016, serving approximately 250,000 residents and visitors to the area daily. It made history as the first emergency communications center in Texas and continues to remain on the cutting edge of technology to ensure the highest levels of safety for those in the Metrocrest area. The NTECC Board of Directors approved funding of the new 911 system in October 2018, and the system went live on October 30, 2019.

For more information about NTECC, visit ntecc.org.

Original source can be found here.

ORGANIZATIONS IN THIS STORY

!RECEIVE ALERTS

The next time we write about any of these orgs, we’ll email you a link to the story. You may edit your settings or unsubscribe at any time.
Sign-up

DONATE

Help support the Metric Media Foundation's mission to restore community based news.
Donate

MORE NEWS