Maryland Code § PS-1-306

Section PS-1-306
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
(a) The Board shall coordinate the enhancement of county 9-1-1 systems.
(b) The Board's responsibilities include:

(1) establishing planning guidelines for enhanced 9-1-1 system
plans and deployment of wireless enhanced 9-1-1 service in accordance with this
subtitle;
(2) establishing procedures to review and approve or disapprove
county plans and to evaluate requests for variations from the planning guidelines
established by the Board;
(3) establishing procedures for the request for reimbursement of the
costs of enhancing a 9-1-1 system by a county or counties in which a 9-1-1 system
is in operation, and procedures to review and approve or disapprove the request;
(4) transmitting the planning guidelines and procedures established
under this section, and any amendments to them, to the governing body of each
county;
(5) submitting to the Secretary each year a schedule for
implementing the enhancement of county or multicounty 9-1-1 systems, and an
estimate of funding requirements based on the approved county plans;
(6) developing, with input from counties, and publishing on or before
July 1, 2004, an implementation schedule for deployment of wireless enhanced 9-1-
1 service;
(7) reviewing and approving or disapproving requests for
reimbursement of the costs of enhancing 9-1-1 systems, and submitting to the
Secretary each year a schedule for reimbursement and an estimate of funding
requirements;
(8) reviewing the enhancement of 9-1-1 systems;
(9) providing for an audit of county expenditures for the operation
and maintenance of 9-1-1 systems;
(10) ensuring inspections of public safety answering points;
(11) reviewing and approving or disapproving requests from counties
with operational enhanced 9-1-1 systems to be exempted from the expenditure
limitations under § 1-312 of this subtitle;
(12) authorizing expenditures from the 9-1-1 Trust Fund that:
(i) are for enhancements of 9-1-1 systems that:

1. are required by the Board;
2. will be provided to a county by a third party
contractor; and
3. will incur costs that the Board has approved before
the formation of a contract between the county and the contractor; and
(ii) are approved by the Board for payment:
1. from money collected under § 1-310 of this subtitle;
and
2. directly to a third party contractor on behalf of a
county;
(13) establishing planning guidelines for Next Generation 9-1-1
services system plans and deployment of Next Generation 9-1-1 services in
accordance with this subtitle;
(14) establishing minimum standards for records retention guidelines
for 9-1-1 audio, pictures, video, text messages, and data;
(15) establishing training standards for public safety answering point
personnel based on national best practices, including training concerning:
(i) Next Generation 9-1-1 topics;
(ii) individual psychological well-being and resilience; and
(iii) subject to subsection (e)(2) of this section, implicit bias
training;
(16) establishing minimum standards for cybersecurity, oversight,
and accountability of service level agreements between counties and core service
providers of Next Generation 9-1-1 services; and
(17) supporting 9-1-1 specialist recruitment activities consisting of:
(i) a database that offers information on recruitment
guidance, best practices, and strategies;

(ii) recruitment projects, including recruitment projects
designed to reach minorities; and
(iii) a website that contains links to job opportunities
throughout the State for 9-1-1 specialists.
(c) The guidelines established by the Board under subsection (b)(1) and (13)
of this section:
(1) shall be based on available technology and equipment;
(2) shall require Next Generation 9-1-1 services systems to be
interconnected and interoperable, as determined by the Board; and
(3) may be based on any other factor that the Board determines is
appropriate, including population and area served by 9-1-1 systems.
(d) The standards established by the Board under subsection (b)(14) of this
section shall include procedures for:
(1) the security of the records;
(2) the establishment and revision, in accordance with the
regulations, of record retention and disposal schedules to ensure the prompt and
orderly disposition of records, including electronic records, that are no longer needed
for operation; and
(3) the maintenance of inventories of records series that are accurate
and complete.
(e) (1) (i) The standards established by the Board under subsection
(b)(15) of this section shall include onboarding standards for newly hired 9-1-1
specialists and minimum continuing education standards for 9-1-1 specialists.
(ii) The Board shall develop criteria and approve the initial
and ongoing training curriculum for the training required under subsection (b)(15) of
this section.
(2) Public safety answering point personnel shall be provided the
implicit bias training required under subsection (b)(15)(iii) of this section:
(i) on or before October 1, 2024, for personnel hired by the
public safety answering point on or before October 1, 2022;

(ii) at the time of hire for personnel hired by the public safety
answering point after October 1, 2022; and
(iii) on a recurring basis with updates as determined by the
Board, but at least once every 4 years.
(3) (i) At least once each year, the Board shall provide for an audit
of each public safety answering point in order to ensure that 9-1-1 specialists and
other personnel employed by the public safety answering point have satisfied the
training requirements established in accordance with subsection (b)(15) of this
section.
(ii) The audit described under subparagraph (i) of this
paragraph may be conducted concurrently with an inspection of the public safety
answering point in accordance with subsection (b)(10) of this section.
(iii) 1. If the Board determines that the personnel
employed by a public safety answering point have not satisfied the training
requirements established in accordance with subsection (b)(15) of this section, the
Board and public safety answering point shall jointly develop a remediation plan and
implementation timeline.
2. The Board may impose sanctions on a public safety
answering point if the public safety answering point fails to comply with a
remediation plan or implementation timeline developed under this subparagraph.
(f) The Board shall establish standards governing the processing of 9-1-1
requests for assistance that:
(1) minimize the transfer of those requests from the public safety
answering point that received the request to other public safety answering points
within or outside the State or federal emergency communication centers; and
(2) follow best practices for transferring requests to public safety
agencies to ensure the optimal public safety response.
(g) The Board shall:
(1) establish minimum standards for 9-1-1 systems, enhanced 9-1-
1 systems, and Next Generation 9-1-1 services that ensure improved access for
individuals with disabilities and individuals who use assistive technologies, including
mandatory connectivity requirements for core service providers for Next Generation
9-1-1 services to device-based and cloud-based data repositories; and

(2) update the standards adopted in accordance with item (1) of this
subsection based on available technology and equipment.
(h) The Board may adopt regulations to implement and enforce this
subtitle.

‹ Prev All Maryland sections Next ›


Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.