On February 16, 2020, a new 911 calling regulation named Kari's Law went into effect. It requires that multi-line telephone systems (MLTS) - like those used in schools, hotels, warehouses, and offices - support certain features designed to make 911 calling safer and more effective for its users.
There are two major components to this regulation:
Manufacturers, vendors, installers, managers and operators of these systems must ensure that any system sold, leased, or installed on or after 02-17-2020 supports these functions to be compliant.
For hosted Hosted PBX Providers and Resellers, it's absolutely critical to understand the requirements of this law.
As with most new regulations, these new E911 requirements are being put into effect due to tragedy. In a Texas motel room in 2013, Kari Hunt tragically died when her 9-year-old daughter tried to call 911 from the motel room phone. But the girl did not know that the system required a ‘9’ prefix to dial out, and the call never went through.
The short answer is no. Compliance with Kari's Law only applies to multi-line systems manufactured, imported, sold, leased, or installed on or after 02-17-2020. However, we recommend that installers performing upgrades to existing systems strongly consider helping their customers become compliant. Their users and any guests may need to access 911 emergency services at some point.
Kind of. The RAY BAUM’S Act is a measure to improve the dispatchable location information that is associated with emergency calls from multi-line telephone systems. Dispatchable location means the location delivered to the public-safety answering point (PSAP), comprised of the validated street address and any additional information like suite or apartment number. RAY BAUM'S Act applies to all MLTS that are manufactured, imported, offered for first sale or lease, first sold or leased, or installed after February 16, 2020.
The new E911 regulations could be great news for service providers offering cloud-based communications services. At least for those operating a compliant multi-tenant Hosted PBX platform. Hosted PBX services easily replace outdated legacy PBX hardware which are likely not compliant with the new law. Further, Hosted PBX solutions provide powerful VoIP features and cost savings that legacy PBXs can’t match. These are major selling points to win new business customers and break into new markets.
However, providers, resellers and installers of legacy or non-911-compliant systems need to find alternative partners or hosted PBX platforms to remain compliant.
RingLogix offers a white-label and multi-tenant VoIP reseller platform that is fully compliant with Kari's Law. Partners can activate, install, manage, bill and support a range of VoIP solutions from SIP Trunking to Hosted PBX and advanced Call Center systems.
E911 management is completely self-service with branded online portals for both partners and their customers.
Some of the unique 911 features RingLogix offers include:
If you would like to learn more about how RingLogix can help you remain compliant with Kari’s Law and improve the safety of your users, request a free demo of our platform and see how it works.
Meet RingOS. An all-in-one platform that lets you quote, activate, bill, and support your own Unified Communication and Voice services.
An E911 specialist will answer all your questions during the demo.
About us: RingLogix offers a white label VoIP platform - RingOS - that enables Partners to sell, provision, invoice, and support their own branded VoIP and UC services. We make becoming a VoIP provider easy with a managed VoIP switch, instant order activations, hassle-free number porting, multiple services, and a flexible billing system.