BrandonR
Bronze Member
Here, you don't need landline service to be able to call 911. If there's a phone jack in the house and it's wired up, you can still dial 911 and get connected. Several years ago, they went to a centralized dispatch center and added a "911 tax" to phone services. (Yep, another tax, paid on landline and cell phones) to pay for it. The tax allowed them to install the enhanced 911 for locations and also provided for the ability to dial 911 without a having telephone service.
Since several people here have stated that 911 is the only reason they've kept the landline, they may want to see if that option is available in our ares.
I know ours works because we had to respond to a bunch of 911 hangups when someone would move into a house, hook up a phone and "just see if this thing works", at some point when the other numbers they dialed didn't go through, they'd try 911, then get scared and hand up when the dispatcher answered.
This is true in a lot of states.
Update: About 911 and "disconnected" landlines
Also for those who are worried about 911 on cell phones, most modern 911 systems are able to get the location from the phone within minutes.
Wireless enhanced 911
The billing address associated with a cell phone is not necessarily the location to which emergency responders should be sent, since the device is portable. This means that locating the caller is more complicated, and there is a different set of legal requirements.
Requirements
The U.S. Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has several requirements applicable to wireless or mobile telephones:[3]
Basic 911: All 911 calls must be relayed to a call center, regardless of whether the mobile phone user is a customer of the network being used.
E911 Phase 1: Wireless network operators must identify the phone number and cell phone tower used by callers, within six minutes of a request by a PSAP.
E911 Phase 2
95% of a network operator's in-service phones must be E911 compliant ("location capable") by December 31, 2005. (Several carriers missed this deadline, and were fined by the FCC.[4])
Wireless network operators must provide the latitude and longitude of callers within 300 meters, within six minutes of a request by a PSAP.[5] Accuracy rates must meet FCC standards on average within any given participating PSAP service area by September 11, 2012 (deferred from September 11, 2008).[6]
Location information is not only transmitted to the call center for the purpose of sending emergency services to the scene of the incident, it is used by the wireless network operator to determine to which PSAP to route the call.