FCC settles 911 & outage notification case with Charter for $15M

Consent decree terms include significant cybersecurity measures to bolster critical infrastructure communications network resilience. #pressrelease

July 29, 2024

2 Min Read

The Federal Communications Commission today announced a $15 million settlement with Charter Communications to resolve an Enforcement Bureau investigation into the company's compliance with 911 and network outage notification rules. As part of the settlement, Charter admits to violating the agency's rules regarding notifications to public safety officials and the Commission in connection with three unplanned network outages and hundreds of planned, maintenance-related network outages that occurred last year.

In one case, Charter failed to notify more than 1,000 emergency call centers of a service disruption impacting 911 service and failed to comply with the Commission's outage reporting rules. The company will pay a $15 million civil penalty and implement a robust compliance plan, including cybersecurity provisions, to ensure network resiliency and future adherence to the Commission's 911 and network reporting rules.

The settlement's compliance plan includes the first-of-its-kind application of certain cybersecurity measures—including network segmentation and vulnerability mitigation management—related to 911 communications services and network outage reporting. Charter has agreed to maintain and evolve its overall cybersecurity risk management program in accordance with the voluntary National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) Cyber Security Framework, and other applicable industry standards and best practices, and applicable state and/or federal laws covering cybersecurity risk management and governance practices.

The FCC's rules require interconnected voice over Internet protocol (VoIP) providers, such as Charter, to notify 911 call centers as soon as possible of outages longer than 30 minutes that potentially affect such call centers. Providers are also required to file by set deadlines in the FCC's Network Outage Reporting System when outages reach a certain severity threshold.

The settlement concerns a network outage experienced by Charter on February 19, 2023, two additional outages on March 31, 2023, and April 26, 2023, and hundreds of planned maintenance-related outages that Charter failed to report to the Commission. With regard to the February 19, 2023 outage, it was determined that Charter's network was the target of a minor Denial of Service (DoS) attack.

Read the full press release here.

FCC

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