|
Yes, your vendor will/may have a tariff charge for TSP. The Federal Government
does not charge for TSP. For TSP restoral, typically there is a one-time
setup fee and a monthly service charge to have the service available to
you. However, these fees are separate from any charges related to actually
installing or repairing your circuits following an emergency. Similarly,
when using TSP to provision a new circuit, there is no cost from the Federal
Government. However, the service provider’s charges still apply,
and depending on the circumstances may be higher than normal. In any case,
contact your service provider to learn more about charges.
Telecommunication services are defined as the transmission, emission,
or reception of intelligence of any nature, by wire, cable, satellite,
fiber optics, laser, radio, visual, or other electronic, electric, electromagnetic,
or acoustically coupled means, or any combination thereof.
NS/EP telecommunication services are services used to maintain a state
of readiness or to respond to and manage any event or crisis that causes
or could cause injury or harm to the population or damage to or loss of
property or that degrades or threatens the NS/EP posture of the United
States.
Entities requesting TSP must complete a TSP Request for Service Users
form (SF 315), either by hard copy or electronically through e-Forms (found
on tsp.ncs.gov website), specifying their NS/EP provisioning and/or restoration
information.
Note: before using the TSP provisioning process to install new
services, users should first contact their telecommunications vendors
to inquire whether the need for an expedited provisioning can be met through
a service level agreement.
TSP restoral is like an insurance policy for your existing circuits (both
voice and data), while TSP provisioning is for new circuits. For TSP restoral,
after determining which circuits are critical to your organization, you
request TSP Authorization Codes for each one. Upon receipt of these codes,
you give them to your service provider so that they have everything in
place should an emergency require the restoral of your circuits. TSP provisioning
is for when you need a new circuit installed sooner than your service
provider would be able to meet using normal business procedures. When
this happens, contact the TSP Program Office to make your request. Note
that TSP provisioning is not intended to compensate for inadequate planning.
When you receive your TSP Authorization Code, give it to your service
provider to enter into their records. Like an insurance policy, all TSP
Authorization Codes must be in your provider’s network before an
emergency happens.
Users should be aware that TSP restoration priorities must be requested
and assigned before a service outage occurs.
TSP users should have realistic expectations regarding when a request
for provisioned services can be filled. Users should be aware that the
“provisioning due date” data field which they complete on
the Standard Form (SF) 315 is not necessarily the date on which service
will be guaranteed. The service vendor is required to make its best effort
to provide Essential and Emergency TSP services by the requested due date.
A number of factors, including volume of provisioning and restoration
requests and worksite accessibility, may cause unexpected provisioning
delays.
Note: When requesting an emergency provisioning, the user point-of-contact
should be ready to accept installation of the service immediately after
making the request. The point-of-contact must also be ready to accept
the service on weekends or after business hours. Generally, vendor technicians
will not return to sites that refuse them access because no user point
of contact is available to ensure the vendor personnel can enter the facility
and begin work.
An Invocation Official is a designated individual with the authority and
responsibility to approve the cost and criticality of a provisioning request
for telecommunications service, certifying that the NS/EP service is so
vital that it must be expeditiously provisioned. Invocation officials
include the head or director of a Federal agency, commander of a unified
or specified military command, chief of a military service, commander
of a major military command and State Governors responding to a State
or local disaster and emergencies for which no Federal funding is expected
to be requested. Invocation authority may be delegated to appropriate
individuals within their agencies/commands/senior State officials in writing
to the TSP Program Office.
TSP authorization codes are valid for 3 years. The FCC requires that all
users revalidate their requirement for TSP every 3 years before expiration
of the user's TSP authorization code(s).
If a TSP service user changes their telephone service provider, the user
must revoke the TSP Authorization codes with the TSP Program Office and
request new codes to pass on to the new phone company. The new vendor
must submit a TSP Confirmation for Service Vendors form (SF 318) to the
TSP Program Office, indicating the circuit ID numbers for the user's TSP
assignments. Also, the previous vendor must submit a TSP Confirmation
for Service Vendors form (SF318) indicating they are no longer the service
provider.
In some instances, your vendor may automatically detect the problem and
will restore the service as soon as possible. However, you should also
report your service problem to your service provider following your customary
trouble reporting procedures. When you report the trouble, be sure to
verify with your provider that the service is identified with TSP in the
provider’s records. If the provider’s records do not reflect
TSP, you may contact the TSP Program Office to verify your TSP assignment
and ask for the contact information for the service provider’s TSP
escalation point of contact (POC). In the unlikely event that the vendor
POC cannot help you, you may contact the TSP Program Office for assistance.
The TSP Confirmation process is the mechanism the TSP Program Office uses
to ensure that the priority level it assigns a given circuit and the priority
level the prime service vendor assigns that circuit are the same. The
FCC’s TSP Program rules require vendors to submit reports to the
TSP Program Office confirming the completion of all TSP service orders
for which they are the prime service vendor. They must do this within
45 calendar days of completing a TSP service order.
For assistance, please dial 866-NCS-CALL (627-2255) (DC metro area, please
use 703-760-2255).
Guidance for specific types of organizations that commonly
request TSP appears in the following links (all documents are in the Micorsoft
Word format):
First
Responders FAQs
First
Responders Enrollment Guide
Health
Care FAQs
Health Care
Enrollment Guide
PSAP FAQs
PSAP Enrollment Guide
PUC FAQs
PUC Enrollment Guide
|