State of Illinois
91st General Assembly
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Public Act 91-0518

SB149 Enrolled                                 LRB9102274MWgc

    AN ACT to amend the Emergency  Telephone  System  Act  by
changing Sections 6 and  15.6.

    Be  it  enacted  by  the People of the State of Illinois,
represented in the General Assembly:

    Section 5.  The Emergency Telephone System Act is amended
by changing Sections 6 and 15.6 as follows:

    (50 ILCS 750/6) (from Ch. 134, par. 36)
    Sec. 6.  Capabilities of  system;  pay  telephones.   All
systems  shall  be designed to meet the specific requirements
of each community and public agency  served  by  the  system.
Every  system,  whether  basic  or  sophisticated,  shall  be
designed  to  have  the capability of utilizing at least 1 of
the methods specified in  Sections   2.03  through  2.06,  in
response  to emergency calls.  The General Assembly finds and
declares that the most critical aspect of the design  of  any
system  is the procedure established for handling a telephone
request for emergency services.
    In addition, to maximize efficiency  and  utilization  of
the  system,  all  pay  telephones  within each system shall,
within 3 years after the implementation date or  by  December
31, 1985, whichever is later, enable a caller to dial "9-1-1"
for  emergency  services without the necessity of inserting a
coin.  This  paragraph  does  not  apply  to  pay  telephones
located  in penal institutions, as defined in Section 2-14 of
the Criminal Code of 1961, that have been designated for  the
exclusive use of committed persons.
(Source: P.A. 85-978.)

    (50 ILCS 750/15.6)
    Sec. 15.6.  Enhanced 9-1-1 service;  business service.
    (a)  After  June  30,  2000,  or  within  18 months after
enhanced 9-1-1 service becomes  available,  any  entity  that
installs  or  operates  a private business switch service and
provides  telecommunications  facilities   or   services   to
businesses  shall  assure that the system is connected to the
public switched network in  a  manner  that  calls  to  9-1-1
result  in automatic number and location identification.  For
buildings having their  own  street  address  and  containing
workspace   of   40,000   square   feet   or  less,  location
identification shall include the building's  street  address.
For  buildings having their own street address and containing
workspace  of  more  than  40,000   square   feet,   location
identification  shall  include  the building's street address
and one distinct location identification  per  40,000  square
feet of workspace. Separate buildings containing workspace of
40,000  square  feet  or  less  having a common public street
address shall have a  distinct  location  identification  for
each building in addition to the street address.
    (b)  Exemptions.   Buildings containing workspace of more
than 40,000 square feet are exempt from the multiple location
identification requirements of subsection (a) if the building
maintains, at all times, alternative and  adequate  means  of
signaling  and  responding to emergencies.  Those means shall
include, but not be  limited  to,  a  telephone  system  that
provides  the  physical  location  of 9-1-1 calls coming from
within the building.  Health care facilities are presumed  to
meet the requirements of this paragraph if the facilities are
staffed  with  medical  or nursing personnel 24 hours per day
and if an alternative means of  providing  information  about
the  source of an emergency call exists. Buildings under this
exemption  must  provide  9-1-1  service  that  provides  the
building's street address.
    Buildings containing workspace of more than 40,000 square
feet  are  exempt  from  subsection  (a)  if   the   building
maintains,  at  all  times, alternative and adequate means of
signaling  and  responding  to   emergencies,   including   a
telephone  system  that provides the location of a 9-1-1 call
coming from within the building, and the building is serviced
by its own medical, fire and security  personnel.   Buildings
under  this  exemption  are subject to emergency phone system
certification by the Illinois Commerce Commission.
    Buildings in communities not serviced by  enhanced  9-1-1
service  are  exempt  from  subsection  (a). Private business
switch service 9-1-1 service.
    (a)   After June 30, 1996, an  entity  that  installs  or
operates a new private business switch service or replaces an
existing   private   business  switch  service  and  provides
telecommunications facilities or services to businesses shall
provide to those business end users the same level  of  9-1-1
service  as  the  public  agency  and  the telecommunications
carrier are providing to other  business  end  users  of  the
local  9-1-1  system.  This service shall include, but not be
limited to, the capability to identify the telephone  number,
extension  number,  and  the  physical  location  that is the
source of the call to the number designated as the  emergency
telephone   number.    After  June  30,  1999,  all  entities
providing or operating  a  private  business  switch  service
shall be in compliance with this Section.
    (b)  The  private business switch operator is responsible
for forwarding end  user  automatic  location  identification
record  information to the 9-1-1 system provider according to
the format, frequency, and  procedures  established  by  that
system provider.
    (c)  This  Act  does  not  apply  to  any  PBX  telephone
extension  that uses radio transmissions to convey electrical
signals directly between  the  telephone  extension  and  the
serving PBX.
    (d)  An  entity that violates this Section is guilty of a
business offense and shall be fined not less than $1,000  and
not more than $5,000.
    (e)  Nothing  in  this  Section  shall  be  construed  to
preclude  the Attorney General on behalf of the Commission or
on his or her own initiative, or any other interested person,
from seeking judicial relief,  by  mandamus,  injunction,  or
otherwise, to compel compliance with this Section.
    (f)  The   Commission  shall  promulgate  rules  for  the
administration of this Section no later than January 1, 2000.
(Source: P.A.  88-604,  eff.  9-1-94;  89-222,  eff.  1-1-96;
89-497, eff. 6-27-96.)

    Section  99.  Effective date.  This Act takes effect upon
becoming law.

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