Goto Section: 63.90 | 63.500 | Table of Contents
FCC 63.100
Revised as of
Goto Year:1996 |
1998
Sec. 63.100 Notification of service outage.
(a) As used in this section:
(1) Outage is defined as a significant degradation in the ability of
a customer to establish and maintain a channel of communications as a
result of failure or degradation in the performance of a carrier's
network.
(2) Customer is defined as a user purchasing telecommunications
service from a common carrier.
(3) Special offices and facilities are defined as major airports,
major military installations, key government facilities, and nuclear
power plants. 911 special facilities are addressed separately in
paragraph (a)(4) of this section.
[[Page 165]]
(4) An outage which potentially affects a 911 special facility is
defined as a significant service degradation, switch or transport, where
rerouting to the same or an alternative answering location was not
implemented, and involves one or more of the following situations:
(i) Isolation of one or more Public Service Answering Points (PSAPs)
for 24 hours or more, if the isolated PSAPs collectively serve less than
30,000 or more access lines, based on the carrier's database of lines
served by each PSAP; or
(ii) Loss of call processing capabilities in the E911 tandem(s), for
30 minutes or more, regardless of the number of customers affected; or
(iii) Isolation of one or more PSAP(s), for 30 or more minutes, if
the isolated PSAPs collectively serve 30,000 or more access lines, based
on the carrier's database of lines served by each PSAP; or
(iv) Isolation of an end office switch or host/remote cluster, for
30 minutes or more, if the switches collectively serve, 30,000 or more
access lines.
(5) Major airports are defined as those airports described by the
Federal Aviation Administration as large or medium hubs. The member
agencies of the National Communications System (NCS) will determine
which of their locations are ``major military installations'' and ``key
government facilities.''
(6) An outage which ``potentially affects'' a major airport is
defined as an outage that disrupts 50% or more of the air traffic
control links or other FAA communications links to any major airport,
any outage that has caused an Air Route Traffic Control Center (ARTCC)
or major airport to lose it radar, any ARTCC or major airport outage
that has received any media attention of which the carrier's reporting
personnel are aware, any outage that causes a loss of both primary and
backup facilities at any ARTCC or major airport, and any outage to an
ARTCC or major airport that is deemed important by the FAA as indicated
by FAA inquiry to the carrier management personnel.
(7) A mission-affecting outage is defined as an outage that is
deemed critical to national security/emergency preparedness (NS/EP)
operations of the affected facility by the National Communications
System member agency operating the affected facility.
(b) Any local exchange or interexchange common carrier or
competitive access provider that operates transmission or switching
facilities and provides access service or interstate or international
telecommunications service, that experiences an outage which potentially
affects 50,000 or more of its customers on any facilities which it owns,
operates or leases, must notify the Commission if such outage continues
for 30 or more minutes. Satellite carriers and cellular carriers are
exempt from this reporting requirement. Notification must be served on
the Commission's Duty Officer, on duty 24 hours a day in the FCC's
Communications and Crisis Management Center in Washington, DC.
Notification may be served on the Commission's Watch Officer on duty at
the FCC's Columbia Operations Center in Columbia, MD, or at such other
facility designated by the Commission by regulation or (at the time of
the emergency) by public announcement only if there is a telephone
outage or similar emergency in Washington, DC. The notification must be
by facsimile or other record means delivered within 120 minutes of the
carrier's first knowledge that the service outage potentially affects
50,000 or more customers, if the outage continues for 30 or more
minutes. Notification shall identify a contact person who can provide
further information, the telephone number at which the contact person
can be reached, and what information is known at the time about the
service outage including: the date and estimated time (local time at the
location of the outage) of commencement of the outage; the geographic
area affected; the estimated number of customers affected; the types of
services affected (e.g. interexchange, local, cellular); the duration of
the outage, i.e. time elapsed from the estimated commencement of the
outage until restoration of full service; the estimated number of
blocked calls during the outage; the apparent or known cause of the
incident, including the name and type of equipment involved and the
specific part of
[[Page 166]]
the network affected; methods used to restore service; and the steps
taken to prevent recurrences of the outage. When specifying the types of
services affected by any reportable outage, carriers must indicate when
911 service was disrupted and rerouting to alternative answering
locations was not implemented. The report shall be captioned Initial
Service Disruption Report. Lack of any of the above information shall
not delay the filing of this report. Not later than thirty days after
the outage, the carrier shall file with the Chief, Common Carrier
Bureau, a Final Service Disruption Report providing all available
information on the service outage, including any information not
contained in its Initial Service Disruption Report and detailing
specifically the root cause of the outage and listing and evaluating the
effectiveness and application in the immediate case of any best
practices or industry standards identified by the Network Reliability
Council to eliminate or ameliorate outages of the reported type.
(c) Any local exchange or interexchange common carrier or
competitive access provider that operates transmission or switching
facilities and provides access service or interstate or international
telecommunications service, that experiences an outage which potentially
affects at least 30,000 and less than 50,000 of its customers on any
facilities which it owns, operates or leases, must notify the Commission
if such outage continues for 30 or more minutes. Satellite carriers and
cellular carriers are exempt from this reporting requirement.
Notification must be served on the Commission's Duty Officer, on duty 24
hours a day in the FCC's Communications and Crisis Management Center in
Washington, DC. Notification may be served on the Commission's Watch
Officer on duty at the FCC's Columbia Operations Center in Columbia, MD,
or at such other facility designated by the Commission by regulation or
(at the time of the emergency) by public announcement only if there is a
telephone outage or similar emergency in Washington, DC. The
notification must be by facsimile or other record means delivered within
3 days of the carrier's first knowledge that the service outage
potentially affects at least 30,000 but less than 50,000 customers, if
the outage continues for 30 or more minutes. Notification shall identify
the carrier and a contact person who can provide further information,
the telephone number at which the contact person can be reached, and
what information is known at the time about the service outage
including: the date and estimated time (local time at the location of
the outage) of commencement of the outage; the geographic area affected;
the estimated number of customers affected; the types of services
affected (e.g. interexchange, local, cellular); the duration of the
outage, i.e. time elapsed from the estimated commencement of the outage
until restoration of full service; the estimated number of blocked calls
during the outage; the apparent or known cause of the incident,
including the name and type of equipment involved and the specific part
of the network affected; methods used to restore service; and the steps
taken to prevent recurrences of the outage. When specifying the types of
services affected by any reportable outage, carriers must indicate when
911 service was disrupted and rerouting to alternative answering
locations was not implemented. The report shall be captioned Initial
Service Disruption Report. Lack of any of the above information shall
not delay the filing of this report. Not later than thirty days after
the outage, the carrier shall file with the Chief, Common Carrier
Bureau, a Final Service Disruption Report providing all available
information on the service outage, including any information not
contained in its Initial Service Disruption Report and detailing
specifically the root cause of the outage and listing and evaluating the
effectiveness and application in the immediate case of any best
practices or industry standards identified by the Network Reliability
Council to eliminate or ameliorate outages of the reported type.
(d) Any local exchange or interexchange carrier or competitive
access provider that operates transmission or switching facilities and
provides access service or interstate or international
[[Page 167]]
telecommunications service that experiences a fire-related incident in
any facilities which it owns, operates or leases that impacts 1000 or
more service lines must notify the Commission if the incident continues
for a period of 30 minutes or longer. Satellite carriers and cellular
carriers are exempt from this reporting requirement. Notification must
be served on the Commission's Duty Officer, on duty 24 hours a day in
the FCC's Communications and Crisis Management Center in Washington, DC.
Notification may be served on the Commission's Watch Officer on duty in
the FCC's Columbia Operations Center in Columbia, MD, or at such other
facility designated by the Commission by regulation or (at the time of
the emergency) by public announcement only if there is a telephone
outage or similar emergency in Washington, DC. The notification must be
by facsimile or other recorded means delivered within 3 days of the
carrier's first knowledge that the incident is fire-related, impacting
1000 or more lines for thirty or more minutes. Notification shall
identify the carrier and a contact person who can provide further
information, the telephone number at which the contact person can be
reached, and what information is known at the time about the service
outage including: the date and estimated time (local time at the
location of the outage) of commencement of the outage; the geographic
area affected; the estimated number of customers affected; the types of
services affected (e.g. interexchange, local cellular); the duration of
the outage, i.e. time elapsed from the estimated commencement of the
outage until restoration of full service; the estimated number of
blocked calls during the outage; the apparent or known cause of the
incident, including the name and type of equipment involved and the
specific part of the network affected; methods used to restore service;
and the steps taken to prevent recurrences of the outage. When
specifying the types of services affected by any reportable outage,
carriers must indicate when 911 service was disrupted and rerouting to
alternative answering locations was not implemented. The report shall be
captioned Initial Service Disruption Report. Lack of any of the above
information shall not delay the filing of this report. Not later than
thirty days after the incident, the carrier shall file with the Chief,
Common Carrier Bureau, a Final Report providing all available
information on the incident, including any information not contained in
its Initial Report and detailing specifically the root cause of the
incident and listing and evaluating the effectiveness and application in
the immediate case of any best practices or industry standards
identified by the Network Reliability Council to eliminate or ameliorate
incidents of the reported type.
(e) Any local exchange or interexchange common carrier or
competitive access provider that operates transmission or switching
facilities and provides access service or interstate or international
telecommunications service, that experiences an outage on any facilities
which it owns, operates or leases which potentially affects special
offices and facilities must notify the Commission if such outage
continues for 30 or more minutes regardless of the number of customers
affected. Satellite carriers and cellular carriers are exempt from this
reporting requirement. Notification must be served on the Commission's
Duty Officer, on duty 24 hours a day in the FCC's Communications and
Crisis Management Center in Washington, DC. Notification may be served
on the Commission's Watch Officer on duty at the Columbia Operations
Center in Columbia, MD, or at such other facility designated by the
Commission by regulation or (at the time of the emergency) by public
announcement only if there is a telephone outage or similar emergency in
Washington, DC. The notification must be by facsimile or other record
means delivered within 120 minutes of the carrier's first knowledge that
the service outage potentially affects a special facility, if the outage
continues for 30 or more minutes. Notification shall identify a contact
person who can provide further information, the telephone number at
which the contact person can be reached, and what information is known
at the time about the service outage including: the date and estimated
time (local time at
[[Page 168]]
the location of the outage) of commencement of the outage; the
geographic area affected; the estimated number of customers affected;
the types of services affected (e.g. 911 emergency services, major
airports); the duration of the outage, i.e. time elapsed from the
estimated commencement of the outage until restoration of full service;
the estimated number of blocked calls during the outage; the apparent or
known cause of the incident, including the name and type of equipment
involved and the specific part of the network affected; methods used to
restore service; and the steps taken to prevent recurrences of the
outage. When specifying the types of services affected by any reportable
outage, carriers must indicate when 911 service was disrupted and
rerouting to alternative answering locations was not implemented. The
report shall be captioned Initial Service Disruption Report. Lack of any
of the above information shall not delay the filing of this report. Not
later than thirty days after the outage, the carrier shall file with the
Chief, Common Carrier Bureau, a Final Service Disruption Report
providing all available information on the service outage, including any
information not contained in its Initial Service Disruption Report and
detailing specifically the root cause of the outage and listing and
evaluating the effectiveness and application in the immediate case of
any best practices or industry standards identified by the Network
Reliability Council to eliminate or ameliorate outages of the reported
type. Under this rule, carriers are not required to report outages
affecting nuclear power plants, major military installations and key
government facilities to the Commission. Report at these facilities will
be made according to the following procedures:
(1) When there is a mission-affecting outage, the affected facility
will report the outage to the National Communications System (NCS) and
call the service provider in order to determine if the outage is
expected to last 30 minutes. If the outage is not expected to, and does
not, last 30 minutes, it will not be reported to the FCC. If it is
expected to last 30 minutes or does last 30 minutes, the NCS, on the
advice of the affected special facility, will either:
(i) Forward a report of the outage to the Commission, supplying the
information for initial reports affecting special facilities specified
in this section of the Commission's Rules;
(ii) Forward a report of the outage to the Commission, designating
the outage as one affecting ``special facilities,'' but reporting it at
a level of detail that precludes identification of the particular
facility involved; or
(iii) Hold the report at the NCS due to the critical nature of the
application.
(2) If there is to be a report to the Commission, a written or oral
report will be given by the NCS within 120 minutes of an outage to the
Commission's Duty Officer, on duty 24 hours a day in the FCC's
Communications and Crisis Management Center in Washington, DC.
Notification may be served on the Commission's Watch Officer on duty at
the FCC's Columbia Operations Center in Columbia, MD, or at such other
facility designated by the Commission by regulation or (at the time of
the emergency) by public announcement only if there is a telephone
outage or similar emergency in Washington, DC. If the report is oral, it
is to be followed by a written report the next business day. Those
carriers whose service failures are in any way responsible for the
outage must consult with NCS upon its request for information.
(3) If there is to be a report to the Commission, the service
provider will provide a written report to the NCS, supplying the
information for final reports for special facilities required by this
section of the Commission's rules. The service provider's final report
to the NCS will be filed within 28 days after the outage, allowing the
NCS to then file the report with the Commission within 30 days after the
outage. If the outage is reportable as described in paragraph (e)(2) of
this section, and the NCS determines that the final report can be
presented to the Commission without jeopardizing matters of national
security or emergency preparedness, the NCS will forward the report as
provided in either paragraphs (e)(1)(i) or (e)(1)(ii) of this section to
the Commission.
[[Page 169]]
(f) If an outage is determined to have affected a 911 facility so as
to be reportable as a special facilities outage, the carrier whose duty
it is to report the outage to the FCC shall as soon as possible by
telephone or other electronic means notify any official who has been
designated by the management of the affected 911 facility as the
official to be contacted by the carrier in case of a telecommunications
outage at that facility. The carrier shall convey all available
information to the designated official that will be useful to the
management of the affected facility in mitigating the affects of the
outage on callers to that facility.
(g) In the case of LEC end offices, carriers will use the number of
lines terminating at the office for determining whether the criteria for
reporting an outage has been reached. In the case of IXC or LEC tandem
facilities, carriers must, if technically possible, use real-time
blocked calls to determine whether criteria for reporting an outage have
been reached. Carriers must report IXC and LEC tandem outages where more
than 150,000 calls are blocked during a period of 30 or more minutes for
purposes of complying with the required 50,000 potentially affected
customers threshold and must report such outages where more than 90,000
calls are blocked during a period of 30 or more minutes for purposes of
complying with the 30,000 potentially affected customers threshold.
Carriers may use historical data to estimate blocked calls when required
real-time blocked call counts are not possible. When using historical
data, carriers must report incidents where more than 50,000 calls are
blocked during a period of 30 or more minutes for purposes of complying
with the required 50,000 potentially affected customers threshold and
must report incidents where more than 30,000 calls are blocked during a
period of 30 or more minutes for purposes of complying with the 30,000
potentially affected customers threshold.
(h)(1) Any local exchange or interexchange common carrier or
competitive access provider that operates transmission or switching
facilities and provides access services or interstate or international
telecommunications services, the experiences an outage on any facilities
that it owns, operates or leases that potentially affects 911 services
must notify the Commission within the applicable period shown in the
chart in this paragraph (h)(1) if such outage meets one of the following
conditions, as defined in paragraph (a)(4) of this section:
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
----------------
Condition Lines affected Duration
Period
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
----------------
Loss of E911 Tandem capability...... No limit............... 30 minutes or more.... 120 minut
es.
Isolation of PSAP(s)................ Under 30,000 access 24 hours or more...... 120 minut
es.
lines served.
Isolation of PSAP(s)................ 50,000 or more access 30 minutes or more.... 120 minut
es.
lines served.
Isolation of PSAP(s)................ 30,000 to 50,000 access 30 minutes or more.... 3 days.
lines served.
Isolation of EO switch, host/remotes 50,000 or more access 30 minutes or more.... 120 minut
es.
from 911. lines served.
Isolation of EO switch, host/remotes 30,000 to 50,000 access 30 minutes or more.... 3 days.
from 911. lines served.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
----------------
(2) Satellite carriers and cellular carriers are exempted from the
reporting requirement in this paragraph (h). Notification must be served
on the Commission's Duty Officer, on duty 24 hours a day in the FCC's
Communicaitons and Crisis Management Center in Washington, DC.
Notification may be erved on the Commission's Watch Officer on duty at
the Columbia Operations Center in COlumbia, MD, or at such other
facility designated by the Commission by regulation or (at the time of
thee emergency) by public announcement only if there is a telephone
outage or similar emergency in Washington, DC. The notification must be
by facsimile or other record means delivered within the notification
period indicated above from the time of the carrier's first knowledge
that the service outage ``potentially affects a 911 special facility''
as described in paragraph (a)(4) of this section and summarized in the
chart in paragraph (h)(1) of this section and the service outage has
continued for the duration indicated in paragraph (a)(4)
[[Page 170]]
of this section and summarized in the chart in paragraph (h)(1) of this
section. Notification shall identify a contact person who can provide
further information, the telephone number at which the contact person
can be reached, and the information known at the time notification is
made about the service outage including: the date and estimated time
(local time at the location of the outage) of commencement of the
outage; the geographic area affected; the estimated number of customers
affected; the types of services affected; the duration of the outage,
i.e. time elapsed from the estimated commencement of the outage until
restoration of full service; the estimated number of blocked calls
during the outage; the apparent or known cause of the incident,
including the name and type of equipment involved and the specific part
of the network affected; methods used to restore service; and the steps
taken to prevent recurrences of the outage. The report shall be
captioned Initial Service Disruption Report. Lack of any of the
information in this paragraph (h)(2) shall not delay the filing of this
report. Not later than thirty days after the outage, the carrier shall
file with the Chief, Common Carrier Bureau, a Final Service Disruption
Report providing all available information on the service outage,
including any information not contained in its Initial Service
Disruption Report and detailing specifically the root cause of the
outage and listing and evaluating the effectiveness and application in
the immediate case of any best practices or industry standards
identified by the Network Reliability Council to eliminate or ameliorate
outages of the reported type.
[ 59 FR 40266 , Aug. 8, 1994, as amended at 60 FR 57196 , Nov. 14, 1995; 62 FR 39452 , July 23, 1997]
Contents of Applications; Examples
Goto Section: 63.90 | 63.500
Goto Year: 1996 |
1998
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