Pevely Cleanup Day
Pevely Public Works
employees will be collecting appliances,
computers, stereos, water heaters,
furnaces', air conditioners, and more.
We will be going door to door to collect
the items that day. To be assured that
we stop by your home, please call City
Hall at 636-475-4452.
Pevely will be
collecting at a dumpster location at the
back of Pevely Park #1, located off of
Main Street.
There will also be a
dumpster for bulk items to be thrown
away. Stop on by.
No Charge, except for TV's and
Computer Monitors ($15.00 fee).
VOIP - What you need
to know.
Changing to VoIP (Voice over Internet
Protocol) could cost you your life, your
loved ones lives or even your home.
Before you switch your phone, here are
some things you should know.
-
The E911 service
for "traditional" phone gives us
your name, home phone number and
address. VoIP
phones may not
provide E911 service.
With the VoIP you must register your
location with your VoIP provider
when you first purchase the system.
Then each time you move you
must
re-register your location. If
the caller is unable to speak, help
may not be sent if a address does
not appear to the communications
center.
-
Some VoIP
providers do not allow you to access
9-1-1 services from your VoIP phone.
VoIP providers have sent messages
during a 9-1-1 call that states
"Stop. You must dial 9-1-1 from
another telephone. Nine-one-one is
not available from this telephone
line. No emergency personnel will be
dispatched. Please hang-up and dial
9-1-1 from a different phone." (This
message was heard by a teenager who
attempted to call 9-1-1 from every
VoIP phone in her home as her
parents were shot by intruders in
Texas.)
-
Even if your VoIP
provider allows your 9-1-1 call to
reach a Emergency Communications
Center, it
might not be the correct Emergency
Center. Or your 9-1-1 call
could go to your providers Emergency
Center who will then notify the
correct police, ambulance or fire
department. This is costing valuable
time to get the help you need!
-
During power
outages, a corded "traditional"
phone will usually keep working.
VoIP phones attached to your
computer will not keep working
without a UPS (uninterrupted power
supply or battery backup). This also
goes for if your providers service
has gone out of service due to a
power outage.
Things that
the Pevely/Herculaneum Communications Center
asks that you do when you move or get a new
VoIP service:
-
Register your new location, and
phone number.
-
Keep
the address and phone number next to
the phone for the nights a
babysitter might being staying at
the house.
-
DO
NOT HANG UP! If your address and
call back phone number are not
listed during the 9-1-1 call it
could take up
to two hours for help to get
to you.
-
Keep
a "traditional" phone plugged into a
phone outlet. Even though your
'traditional" phone line has been
disconnected, you can still call
9-1-1.
If the
top of this article has not convinced
you to not switch to a VoIP then taken
into consideration of these 9-1-1 calls:
-
A
family moved from Texas to the local
area. They didn't re-register their
new location with their VoIP. A fire
started in the basement and the
homeowner called 9-1-1. The 9-1-1
call went to Texas (where the phone
was last registered). It was up to
30 minutes before the communications
center in Texas was able to verify
their new location and notify the
local communications center. During
this 30 minutes a neighbor had also
called 9-1-1 and was able to get
help to the homeowner because of
their "traditional" phone.
-
A
person called 9-1-1 and requested an
ambulance, during the transfer to
the correct ambulance district the
caller hung up. It took the
communications center 45 minutes to
track down the address of the person
who needed help because their
address and phone number did not
appear to the 9-1-1 call taker.
-
A
person called 9-1-1 needing the
police department because they had
been assaulted. They no longer lived
at the registered address that
appeared to the
9-1-1 call taker.
They had to be given the
non-emergency number to the police
department where they were at
because the communications center
was unable to transfer the caller to
the correct police department.