Plans to boost resilience of 999 system announced

Thu, 21 Mar 2024 04:09:59 GMT
BBC News - Technology

Proposals follow chaotic scenes in June 2023 when people could not connect to emergency services

The government has announced new measures it says will boost the resilience of the 999 system, following its worst outage in almost 90 years.

A nationwide technical issue meant calls were not connected to emergency services in June 2023.The government will increase its oversight of any future incidents and improve communications between emergency services.

"As outlined in the Government's Post-Incident Review, we have put in place a comprehensive improvement plan to prevent this series of events reoccurring."

To improve its oversight of similar events in the future, the government will identify who is responsible and accountable for the 999 system in the face of different threats, such as cyber attacks and natural disasters.

It will identify a way to advise the public on what to do so people can contact emergency services if the 999 system becomes inaccessible across the UK.It said the plans would be in place by the end of April 2024."We are determined to prevent history from repeating itself, with public safety being absolutely paramount," said Technology minister Michelle Donelan.

"This is why, following a thorough review of the incident, we are working with BT to establish enhanced resilience measures, ensuring the UK is always prepared to effectively address major emergencies."

While the outage affected various emergency services in different parts of the country, there are no confirmed cases of serious harm which have been connected to it.

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