Maryland Code, PUBLIC SAFETY 1-301
Terms Used In Maryland Code, PUBLIC SAFETY 1-301
- Amendment: A proposal to alter the text of a pending bill or other measure by striking out some of it, by inserting new language, or both. Before an amendment becomes part of the measure, thelegislature must agree to it.
- County: means a county of the State or Baltimore City. See
- including: means includes or including by way of illustration and not by way of limitation. See
- Person: includes an individual, receiver, trustee, guardian, personal representative, fiduciary, representative of any kind, corporation, partnership, business trust, statutory trust, limited liability company, firm, association, or other nongovernmental entity. See
- state: means :
(1) a state, possession, territory, or commonwealth of the United States; or
(2) the District of Columbia. See
(b) “Board” means the Maryland 9-1-1 Board.
(c) “Commercial mobile radio service” or “CMRS” means mobile telecommunications service that is:
(1) provided for profit with the intent of receiving compensation or monetary gain;
(2) an interconnected, two-way voice service; and
(3) available to the public.
(d) “Commercial mobile radio service provider” or “CMRS provider” means a person authorized by the Federal Communications Commission to provide CMRS in the State.
(e) “County 9-1-1 fee” means the fee imposed by a county in accordance with § 1-311 of this subtitle.
(f) “County plan” means a plan for a 9-1-1 system or enhanced 9-1-1 system, or an amendment to the plan, developed by a county or several counties together under this subtitle.
(g) (1) “Customer” means:
(i) the person that contracts with a home service provider for CMRS; or
(ii) the end user of the CMRS if the end user of the CMRS is not the contracting party.
(2) “Customer” does not include:
(i) a reseller of CMRS; or
(ii) a serving carrier under an arrangement to serve the customer outside the home service provider’s licensed service area.
(h) “Enhanced 9-1-1 system” means a 9-1-1 system that provides:
(1) automatic number identification;
(2) automatic location identification; and
(3) any other technological advancements that the Board requires.
(i) “FCC order” means an order issued by the Federal Communications Commission under proceedings regarding the compatibility of enhanced 9-1-1 systems and delivery of wireless enhanced 9-1-1 service.
(j) (1) “First responder” means an employee of a State or local public safety agency that provides emergency response services.
(2) “First responder” includes:
(i) a firefighter;
(ii) a paramedic;
(iii) an emergency medical technician;
(iv) a rescue squad member;
(v) a sworn member of the Office of the State Fire Marshal;
(vi) a member of a volunteer fire or rescue company who is a covered employee under § 9-234 of the Labor and Employment Article;
(vii) an individual who is licensed or certified under § 13-516 of the Education Article; and
(viii) a 9-1-1 specialist.
(k) “Home service provider” means the facilities-based carrier or reseller that contracts with a customer to provide CMRS.
(l) “Next Generation 9-1-1 services” means an Internet Protocol (IP)-based system, comprised of hardware, software, data, and operational policies and procedures, that:
(1) provides standardized interfaces from emergency call and message services to support emergency communications;
(2) processes all types of requests for emergency services, including voice, text, data, and multimedia information;
(3) acquires and integrates additional emergency call data useful to routing and handling of requests for emergency services;
(4) delivers the emergency calls, messages, and data to the appropriate public safety answering point and other appropriate emergency entities;
(5) supports data or video communications needs for coordinated incident response and management; and
(6) provides broadband service to public safety answering points or other first responder entities.
(m) “9-1-1-accessible service” means telephone service or another communications service that connects an individual dialing the digits 9-1-1 to an established public safety answering point.
(n) (1) “9-1-1 service carrier” means a provider of CMRS or other 9-1-1-accessible service.
(2) “9-1-1 service carrier” does not include a telephone company.
(o) “9-1-1 specialist” means an employee of a county public safety answering point, or an employee working in a county public safety answering point, whose duties and responsibilities include:
(1) receiving and processing 9-1-1 requests for emergency services;
(2) other support functions directly related to 9-1-1 requests for emergency services; or
(3) dispatching law enforcement officers, fire rescue services, emergency medical services, and other public safety services to the scene of an emergency.
(p) (1) “9-1-1 system” means telephone service that:
(i) meets the planning guidelines established under this subtitle; and
(ii) automatically connects an individual dialing the digits 9-1-1 to an established public safety answering point.
(2) “9-1-1 system” includes:
(i) equipment for connecting and outswitching 9-1-1 calls within a telephone central office;
(ii) trunking facilities from a telephone central office to a public safety answering point; and
(iii) equipment to connect 9-1-1 calls to the appropriate public safety agency.
(q) “9-1-1 Trust Fund” means the fund established under § 1-308 of this subtitle.
(r) “Prepaid wireless E 9-1-1 fee” means the fee that is required to be collected by a seller from a consumer in the amount established under § 1-313 of this subtitle.
(s) “Prepaid wireless telecommunications service” means a commercial mobile radio service that:
(1) allows a consumer to dial 9-1-1 to access the 9-1-1 system;
(2) must be paid for in advance; and
(3) is sold in predetermined units that decline with use in a known amount.
(t) “Public safety agency” means:
(1) a functional division of a public agency that provides fire fighting, police, medical, or other emergency services; or
(2) a private entity that provides fire fighting, police, medical, or other emergency services on a voluntary basis.
(u) “Public safety answering point” means a communications facility that:
(1) is operated on a 24-hour basis;
(2) first receives 9-1-1 requests for emergency services in a 9-1-1 service area; and
(3) as appropriate:
(i) dispatches public safety services directly;
(ii) transmits incident data to appropriate public safety agencies within the State for the dispatch of public safety services; or
(iii) transfers 9-1-1 requests for emergency services or transmits incident data to:
1. an appropriate federal emergency communication center responsible for the delivery of public safety services on a federal campus or federal reservation; or
2. an appropriate public safety answering point located within or outside the State.
(v) “Secretary” means the Secretary of Emergency Management.
(w) “Seller” means a person that sells prepaid wireless telecommunications service to another person.
(x) “State 9-1-1 fee” means the fee imposed in accordance with § 1-310 of this subtitle.
(y) “Wireless enhanced 9-1-1 service” means enhanced 9-1-1 service under an FCC order.