Or. Admin. Code § 104-080-0150 - 9-1-1 Jurisdiction Plans
(1) 9-1-1
Jurisdiction Plan. A 9-1-1 jurisdiction shall prepare and maintain a 9-1-1
Jurisdiction Plan.
(2) The 9-1-1
Jurisdiction Plan must meet the requirements of ORS 403.130 and include:
(a) Name and contact information for the
9-1-1 jurisdiction, including the physical and mailing addresses;
(b) A description of the 9-1-1 service area
served by the 9-1-1 jurisdiction, including a map of the geographical area
served and the current total population;
(c) Identification and description of the
9-1-1 jurisdiction's governing authority;
(d) Name and location of the primary PSAP
serving the 9-1-1 jurisdiction, including the physical and mailing addresses,
10-digit emergency phone number, 10-digit non-emergency phone number, and the
name and contact information for the PSAP's director or
administrator;
(e) Name, address
and contact information for all public and private safety agencies served by
the 9-1-1 jurisdiction and primary PSAP as required by ORS 403.115;
and
(f) Number of workstations
funded from the 9-1-1 Subaccount;
(g) A disaster recovery plan meeting the
requirements described in ORS 403.150.
(3) Submittal and Review of new 9-1-1
Jurisdiction Plans. A 9-1-1 jurisdiction must submit completed 9-1-1
Jurisdiction Plan:
(a) A 9-1-1 jurisdiction
must complete and submit to the Department its 9-1-1 Jurisdiction Plan, in
writing, signed by the primary point of contact for the 9-1-1
jurisdiction.
(b) The Department
will review the 9-1-1 Jurisdiction Plan for completeness and compliance with
these rules. If the 9-1-1 Jurisdiction Plan is approved, the Department will
notify the 9-1-1 jurisdiction that the plan is approved. The Department will
keep the 9-1-1 Jurisdiction Plan on file and review it on an annual basis or as
otherwise deemed necessary by the Department;
(c) If the Department rejects the initial
9-1-1 Jurisdiction Plan, the Department will send the 9-1-1 jurisdiction
written notice of the rejection, describing the deficiencies in the plan. The
9-1-1 jurisdiction has 90 days following issuance of the rejection to submit a
revised 9-1-1 Jurisdiction Plan for review. The Department will review the
revised 9-1-1 Jurisdiction Plan and if the revised 9-1-1 Jurisdiction Plan is
unacceptable, the Department will work with the 9-1-1 jurisdiction to complete
an acceptable plan.
(d) A 9-1-1
jurisdiction must submit its approved 9-1-1 Jurisdiction Plans to:
(A) All public and private safety agencies
within the 9-1-1 service area; and
(B) Any other public or private entities
within the 9-1-1 service area that may be affected by the 9-1-1 Jurisdiction
Plan, including all secondary responders.
(4) Annual Review; Amendment of the 9-1-1
Jurisdiction Plan.
(a) Each 9-1-1 Jurisdiction
shall review its 9-1-1 Jurisdiction Plan in January of each year and send the
Department updates as necessary or a notice certifying that the plan has been
reviewed for the year and no changes have been made.
(b) The 9-1-1 jurisdiction shall submit to
the Department, updates as necessary or an amended plan 30 days prior to any
consolidation, co-location, or physical move and within 30 days of any other
change in the information included in the 9-1-1 Jurisdiction Plan.
Notes
Statutory/Other Authority: ORS 403.120; 2015 HB 2426
Statutes/Other Implemented: ORS 403 & 2015 HB 2426
State regulations are updated quarterly; we currently have two versions available. Below is a comparison between our most recent version and the prior quarterly release. More comparison features will be added as we have more versions to compare.
No prior version found.