Oregon Administrative Rules
Chapter 104 - OREGON DEPARTMENT OF EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT
Division 80 - 9-1-1 EMERGENCY COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEM PROGRAM
Section 104-080-0150 - 9-1-1 Jurisdiction Plans
Universal Citation: OR Admin Rules 104-080-0150
Current through Register Vol. 63, No. 9, September 1, 2024
(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.
Statutory/Other Authority: ORS 403.120; 2015 HB 2426
Statutes/Other Implemented: ORS 403 & 2015 HB 2426
Disclaimer: These regulations may not be the most recent version. Oregon may have more current or accurate information. We make no warranties or guarantees about the accuracy, completeness, or adequacy of the information contained on this site or the information linked to on the state site. Please check official sources.
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