BILL ANALYSIS                                                                                                                                                                                                    



                                                                       


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          |SENATE RULES COMMITTEE            |                  AB 2837|
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                                 THIRD READING
                                        

          Bill No:  AB 2837
          Author:   Hertzberg (D)
          Amended:  8/25/00 in Senate
          Vote:     21

            
           SENATE ENERGY, U.&C. COMMITTEE  :  8-0, 6/27/00
          AYES:  Bowen, Alarcon, Hughes, Kelley, Mountjoy, Murray,  
            Peace, Solis

           SENATE APPROPRIATIONS COMMITTEE  :  10-2, 8/23/00
          AYES:  Johnston, Alpert, Bowen, Burton, Escutia, Johnson,  
            Kelley, McPherson, Perata, Vasconcellos
          NOES:  Leslie, Mountjoy

           ASSEMBLY FLOOR  :  63-14, 5/30/00 - See last page for vote
           

           SUBJECT  :    State nonemergency telephone number system

           SOURCE  :     Author

           
           DIGEST  :    This bill authorizes counties and the cities of  
          Los Angeles and the San Jose to establish a "311"  
          nonemergency telephone system designed to serve as the  
          primary nonemergency telephone number in the State.

           ANALYSIS  :    Current law provides for a "911" Emergency  
          Telephone Service system, which is financed by a surcharge  
          on all residential and business telephone bills, and caps  
          that surcharge at 0.75 percent of a customer's telephone  
          bill.

                                                           CONTINUED





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          Current law provides for a pilot program to test a "311"  
          non-emergency telephone system.
          This bill authorizes counties, as well as the City of Los  
          Angeles and the City of San Jose, to establish a "311"  
          non-emergency telephone system.

          This bill allows counties and authorized cities to pay for  
          such a system by increasing the existing 911 surcharge on  
          the telephone bills in their local jurisdiction.
           
           This bill requires the Communications Division of the State  
          Department of General Services (DGS) to help counties and  
          authorized cities create "311" implementation plans, gives  
          the Division the authority to disapprove plans, and  
          requires the Division to administer the "311" program.
           
          Background
           
          As most people are aware, "911" is the number for emergency  
          telephone service.  This service was created in 1976 and  
          paid for by a surcharge (statutorily capped at 0.75  
          percent) on each telephone bill.

          The number of calls to "911" has grown faster that the  
          number of operators needed to answer those calls.  In Los  
          Angeles, it's been reported that five percent of all "911"  
          calls went unanswered and 27 percent of the calls took 10  
          or more seconds to answer.  In the San Francisco Bay Area,  
          23 percent of "911" calls made by cellular telephones went  
          unanswered.

          A significant number of "911" calls are for non-emergency  
          purposes.  Estimates on just how many calls are of a  
          non-emergency variety range from as low as 20 percent to as  
          high as 95 percent.  Here in Sacramento, officials estimate  
          between 50 percent and 80 percent of "911" calls aren't  
          true emergencies.  Current law makes it a misdemeanor to  
          use the "911" system for anything other than reporting  
          emergencies, though this has obviously not been a  
          successful deterrent.

          One idea for relieving the pressure on the "911" system is  
          to provide an alternate means of contacting public safety  
          agencies for non-emergency purposes.  In 1996, President  







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          Clinton called for the creation of a nationwide  
          non-emergency telephone service similar to "911."  In 1997,  
          the Federal Communications Commission ordered that "311"  
          service be made available for that purpose and, in that  
          same year, the Legislature passed AB 1198 (Hertzberg),  
          Chapter 887, Statutes or 1997, which created a "311" pilot  
          program in San Jose.  Under the pilot, a "311" number was  
          tested against an attempt to educate the public about an  
          existing seven-digit non-emergency public assistance  
          number.

          Last year, a final draft report on the results of the pilot  
          program found that both approaches improved "911" response  
          and that the "311" program was the more effective of the  
          two approaches.  Under the "311" program, the average "911"  
          answer time decreased by 26 percent, and the number of  
          non-emergency calls to "911" decreased by 63 percent.


           FISCAL EFFECT  :    Appropriation:  No   Fiscal Com.:  Yes    
          Local:  No

           SUPPORT  :   (Unable to verify due to time constraints)

          Association fo Los Angeles Deputy Sheriffs
          Los Angeles Police Protective League
          Riverside Sheriff's Association
          Santa Clara County Board of Supervisors

           OPPOSITION  :    (Unable to verify due to time constraints)

          State Board of Equalization


           ASSEMBLY FLOOR 
          AYES:  Alquist, Aroner, Battin, Bock, Calderon, Cardenas,  
            Cardoza, Cedillo, Corbett, Correa, Cox, Cunneen, Davis,  
            Dickerson, Ducheny, Dutra, Firebaugh, Florez, Floyd,  
            Frusetta, Gallegos, Havice, Honda, Jackson, Keeley, Knox,  
            Kuehl, Lempert, Leonard, Longville, Lowenthal, Machado,  
            Maddox, Maldonado, Margett, Mazzoni, McClintock, Migden,  
            Nakano, Olberg, Robert Pacheco, Rod Pacheco, Papan,  
            Pescetti, Reyes, Romero, Scott, Shelley, Steinberg,  
            Strickland, Strom-Martin, Thomson, Torlakson,  







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            Villaraigosa, Vincent, Washington, Wayne, Wesson,  
            Wiggins, Wildman, Wright, Zettel, Hertzberg
          NOES:  Aanestad, Ackerman, Ashburn, Bates, Baugh, Brewer,  
            Briggs, Campbell, House, Kaloogian, Leach, Oller, Runner,  
            Thompson


          NC:kb  8/27/00   Senate Floor Analyses

                         SUPPORT/OPPOSITION:  SEE ABOVE

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