TERRE HAUTE —
Vigo County wireless and land line customers in July will see an increase in a monthly fee charged to support a statewide enhanced 911 system.
A new state law effective July 1 will create a single statewide 911 fee charged to wireless and land line telephone customers and stabilize revenue to county 911 systems, at least for the short term, said Barry C. Ritter, executive director of the Indiana Wireless Enhanced 911 Advisory Board.
Ritter addressed a group of Wabash Valley officials and 911 directors in a legislative update meeting Thursday on the campus of Indiana State University.
Currently, Indiana customers of pre-paid discount wireless phones, such as Tracfone or GoPhone, pay 25 cents per transaction for a card to load cellular minutes. After July 1, that will be increased to 50 cents per transaction. Pre-paid cell phone usage is the largest growing segment of wireless use, Ritter said.
A fee charged to other wireless customers, including VOIP (voice over Internet protocol which allows a call through a computer), along with land lines telephones, will be 90 cents per month statewide. The wireless fee has varied among Indiana’s 92 counties from 34 cents per month to as much as $3 a month, Ritter said.
Vigo County residents will see the wireless fee increase to 90 cents from 75 cents per month. Vermillion County residents will see the wireless fee drop to 90 cents per month from $1.63. Marion County’s fee will increase to 90 cents from 42 cents per month.
Counties will be guaranteed a minimum funding level under the new law, Ritter said.
The state will use the average revenue a county collected over a three-year period, from 2009 to 2011, to help set a minimum amount that a county would receive in 911 funding. That will include a cost of living adjustment, Ritter said.
The state will distribute 911 funds using 90 percent distributed based on population in the county and 10 percent on an equal basis statewide.
“Some of those funds will be distributed to other counties to make up their short fall,” said Vigo County 911 director Rob McMullen. “Vigo County will still be fiscally sound but some of the future enhancements [such as more 911 dispatchers] might have to be placed on hold for the time being,” until the county can see what the new law will generates in income, McMullen said after the meeting.
The law allows the 911 funds to be used to lease, purchase or maintain communication service equipment; for system hardware, software and data base equipment; for personnel expenses including wages, benefits, training and continuing education; operational costs, utilities and back up power equipment. It cannot be used “for brick and mortar or for vehicles,” Ritter said, including paying for the cost of fuel.
Vermillion County Sheriff Robert Spence asked if 911 funds could be used for GIS mapping for emergency response addresses. Spence said the former Newport Chemical Depot will need addresses, as it comprises one-sixth of the county’s geographic area. Ritter said that is a covered expense.
The law, Ritter said, will help Indiana determine actual costs for its 911 system. The law sunsets in June 2015, a measure Ritter said will force the Indiana General Assembly “to go back to the table to find a sustainable long-term funding solution.”
Vigo County Councilman Bill Bryan said he likes streamlining collections into a single 911 fund at the county level, but voiced concern that “there is no way right now to track the pre-paid cell phones. If someone buys $25 worth of minutes, is the retailer turning that 50 cents into the state. You can buy those pre-paid minute cards in so many different stores. They may be collecting the 50 cents, but are they turning it in,” Bryan said.
Ritter said that is one issue the new state board will have to review. Gov. Mitch Daniels is to appoint the new board, which goes from seven to 13 members, later this year.
One other area the state will watch is from data-only devices, such an iPad, which are exempt from paying a 911 fee under the new state law. However, such devices using a SIM (Subscriber Identity Module) card have the capability to make a 911 call.
“As we identify technical issues, this is something that we will be watching very closely to ensure our revenue does not decline with more data-only devices being put on the street,” Ritter said.
Howard Greninger can be reached at (812) 231-4204 or howard.greninger@tribstar.com.
News
911 change means higher phone fee
New state law creates fee charged to wireless, land line customers
- News
-
-
Not just graffiti
The scribble of chalk brushing up against a stone wall could be heard Wednesday as children showed their creativity at the 14th and Chestnut Community Center. The messages on the wall were straightforward: “We are ... artistic, amazing, hope, funny, unique.”
-
An honor for the ages
“Until they all come home” are the words written on the concrete floor clearly visible to workers and onlookers as part of the centerpiece to the new Montezuma Veterans Memorial that was set in place Wednesday afternoon at Aztec Park in Parke County.
-
Forget the cellphone, enjoy the summer
The third rail post from the left on the second-floor patio. By holding a cellphone at eye level, with your left hand, while standing perfectly still, without blinking, a faint one-bar signal was possible. Possible. Otherwise, there was no connection to the outside world at this retreat spot in the Blue Ridge Mountains of North Carolina, where my wife and I stayed earlier this month
-
National group gives ISU low marks for training teachers
A national research and advocacy group has given Indiana State University — and more than a dozen other Hoosier colleges and universities — low marks for how it trains teachers.
-
Terre Haute Coke & Carbon: Cleaning up a legacy
When heavy equipment starts moving dirt next week at the former Terre Haute Coke and Carbon industrial site, city officials hope a new day will be dawning for a long-neglected part of town.
-
Diversity growing: New census report shows changing face of Indiana
Like the rest of the nation, Indiana is continuing on a trend toward greater diversity as the numbers of Hispanics, blacks, Asians and other minorities are rising at a faster pace than whites.
-
Valley following diversity path of nation, Indiana
Like much of Indiana, the majority white population in the Wabash Valley is on the decline, while minority populations are on the increase.
-
Court lets walkout fines against House Democrats stand
House Democrats who had to pay more than $100,000 in fines after they walked out of the Indiana Statehouse two years ago during a legislative session won’t get the help they sought from the Indiana Supreme Court.
-
Arrest made, victim identified in Rosedale homicide
The victim in a Parke County homicide that occurred last week has been identified as Kathryn A. Bays, 55, of Rosedale.
-
Vermillion industrial park gets award for transition
The Vermillion Rise Mega Park, a former chemical weapons base now an industrial park north of Clinton, has gotten national attention for its rapid transition to civilian from military use.
-
Slight damage from evening storm
Very little damage was reported from a late evening storm that rolled through the Wabash Valley on Tuesday.
-
U.S. 41 lane restrictions
Motorists should expect delays because of lane restrictions on U.S. 41 in Sullivan County next week as a railroad company repairs a rail crossing 1.2 miles north of Shelburn.
-
Back home again: Items from vaudeville stage and Terre Haute native sent to Historical Society
The staff at the Vigo County Historical Museum are excited about the arrival of priceless items used by Terre Haute-native Rose Fehrenbach and her husband, Edward Pierce, to promote their Vaudeville acts in the early 20th century.
-
Husband charged in Archer homicide
Terre Haute Police have found local reports of domestic violence between a Terre Haute man and his wife, whose body was discovered wrapped in a tarp and dumped in an Ohio ditch.
-
National Road panels dedicated
Rewind to the mid-1800s, when the trotting of a horse and buggy on National Road could be heard alongside the voices of people heading west, searching for opportunities.
-
Pence sets agency priorities
Following a directive from Gov. Mike Pence, state agency heads are reorganizing some of their top priorities to better reflect the first-year governor’s “roadmap for Indiana” plan for improving the state’s economy, infrastructure and health.
-
Another I-70 traffic snarl: Three injured in two related crashes
Three people were injured Monday afternoon from a pair of crashes on Interstate 70 that temporarily closed the highway and diverted traffic into Terre Haute.
-
Terre Haute man still hospitalized after scooter/car crash
A Terre Haute man remained hospitalized Monday at Methodist Hospital in Indianapolis after his scooter struck a car early Saturday on Wabash Avenue at 25th Street.
-
Overpass repairs causing Interstate 70 lane restrictions
Repairs to the Frye Road overpass in southeastern Vigo County has caused a restriction to the left lane of Interstate 70 between the 13- and 14-mile markers, about two miles east of the Indiana 46 exit.
-
Indiana woman condemned for killing at 15 is freed
A woman who was sentenced to death at age 16 for taking part in the torture and murder of a 78-year-old Bible studies teacher was released from an Indiana prison Monday after growing to middle age behind bars.
-
Grant will let Vigo Library evaluate map collection
The Vigo County Public Library has received a $2,000 grant to evaluate its historic map collection, a library official announced Monday.
-
Four juveniles caught on elementary school roof; one injured jumping off
Police say a juvenile was lucky to have suffered only a broken leg after jumping from the roof of a Vigo County elementary school – dropping about 30 feet to the ground.
-
Farmersburg man sentenced after guilty plea in rape case
A Farmersburg man has been sentenced to 12 years in prison after pleading guilty to a rape that occurred at his parents’ residence in May 2012.
-
Still no information being released on Rosedale homicide
No new information was being released Monday afternoon concerning a Rosedale homicide.
-
Fathers take time out to spend quality time with children, grandchildren
A big, circular white cloud rose up through the tall atrium as Mike Woods held his 4-year son, Nathan, Sunday at the Terre Haute Children’s Museum.
-
On Friday, hit the park and raise funds for skateboarders
The On-board United Initiative — O.U.I. for short — has scheduled an all-ages fundraising event Friday in honor of national Go Skateboarding Day.
-
STATE OF THE STATEHOUSE: Sentencing law could benefit juveniles
Monica Foster is a longtime public defender who’s been pushing uphill in the legal system for a long time. So, when she says the General Assembly is making progress protecting the rights of the disenfranchised, it’s worth stopping to listen to her.
-
Mastering the art of Gardening
The Wabash Valley Master Gardeners group gathered over the weekend to marvel at each other’s gardens on its annual garden tour. The event was a chance for master gardeners to showcase their labor of love, meanwhile sharing stories about their plants.
-
RESTAURANT INSPECTIONS: June 17, 2013
The Vigo County Health Department inspected the following food establishments May 28-31:
-
Lawn mower fire destroys barn
A lawn mower that caught fire was cited as the cause of a fire that destroyed a single story barn Sunday in the 2000 block of North Chamberlain Street, said Harold Osborn, assistant fire chief of the Lost Creek Township Fire Department.
- More News Headlines
-





