Written answers

Wednesday, 23 September 2015

Department of Communications, Energy and Natural Resources

Emergency Call Answering Service

Photo of Denis NaughtenDenis Naughten (Roscommon-South Leitrim, Independent)
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143. To ask the Minister for Communications, Energy and Natural Resources the number of 999/112 calls received by the BT central control call centre in 2014 and to date in 2015; the number of calls for each individual service be it Garda, ambulance, fire or Coast Guard; the breakdown between landline and mobile; the current period of the BT contract and the value of same; the percentage which is paid by each phone provider; the plans to review or alter the current service; and if he will make a statement on the matter. [32419/15]

Photo of Alex WhiteAlex White (Dublin South, Labour)
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The Emergency Call Answering Service (ECAS) answers all 112 and 999 calls to the Emergency Services in the State. Emergency calls are free of charge to callers on all telecommunications networks. The ECAS is funded through the Call Handling Fee (“CHF”), a fee payable by the telecommunications operator presenting the call. ECAS also manages an emergency text messaging service allowing deaf, hard of hearing and speech-impaired people in the Republic of Ireland to send an emergency SMS text message. Following a competitive procurement process, the Department appointed BT Ireland to operate the ECAS initially for five years to 14 July 2015. This was extended for 2 years to 14 July 2017 following a detailed assessment of the costs and benefits of extending the current agreement and procurement of a new service. The total value of this contract including set up costs, operator salaries, accommodation and telecommunications costs is estimated at €55 million over the seven year term.

The ECAS is performing to a consistently high standard and exceeding all of the performance levels set out in the Concession Agreement. It has handled over 10 million calls since it launched in July 2010 and has filtered out over 6.2 million calls allowing the emergency services to deal with genuine emergency calls. The average speed of answer for a caller to ECAS is 0.6 seconds which is one of the fastest in Europe according to a report by the European Commission “Implementation of the European emergency number 112”. Calls are passed to the appropriate Emergency Service in under 6.5 seconds on average with details of the emergency and the location of the caller.

My Department is in the process of preparing an invitation to tender (ITT) for a new concession agreement to operate the service with effect from 14 July 2017.

Details of the call volumes requested is set out in this following table:

20142015 (to 1 September 2015)
Total Calls to ECAS2,149,4451,243,827
Garda595,850363,827
Fire72,20344,874
Ambulance287,156190,677
Coast Guard7,8115,270
Total Landline Calls 538,006311,330
Total Mobile Calls1,611,439932,497

It should be noted that these figures only represent 112/999 calls to the Emergency Services and do not include other direct calls to local stations or offices.

The percentage paid by individual phone providers is commercially sensitive and is not provided in order to respect the legitimate commercial interests of the phone providers.

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