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Bill > SF2458
IA SF2458
IA SF2458A bill for an act relating to public safety answering points, including limitations, property tax allocation, service requirements, management, consolidation, transfer of duties from joint 911 service boards to local emergency management commissions, and reporting requirements, and including transfer and effective date provisions.(Formerly SSB 3008.)
summary
Introduced
02/23/2026
02/23/2026
In Committee
02/24/2026
02/24/2026
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead
Introduced Session
91st General Assembly
Bill Summary
This bill relates to public safety answering points, including setting limitations, property tax allocation, service requirements, management, consolidation, transfer of duties from joint 911 service boards to local emergency management commissions, and reporting requirements. DIVISION I —— PUBLIC SAFETY ANSWERING POINTS. The bill authorizes the Iowa finance authority to exercise the same bonding and fund-pooling powers when delegated by a local emergency management commission as currently allowed when delegated by a joint 911 service board. The bill requires each local emergency management commission to annually submit to the department of homeland security and emergency management (department) a five-year plan addressing anticipated 911 service infrastructure needs and an inventory of personnel, equipment, structures, and public safety agency equipment within the commission’s jurisdiction. The department must publish this information on its internet site. The bill requires each public safety answering point that accesses criminal justice information to comply with the security policy of the federal bureau of investigation’s criminal justice information services and any requirements imposed by the Iowa department of public safety. The bill requires a local emergency management commission to maintain a countywide 911 service plan unless an exemption is granted. The bill limits each county to not more than one PSAP, with exceptions relating to certain cities and for PSAPs operated by the national guard, any branch of the armed forces of the United States, or the department of public safety. The bill requires a city located in more than one county to enter into an agreement with the counties and the local emergency management commissions serving the city to determine how 911 calls originating from the city are allocated to the public safety answering points in the counties where the city is located. The bill requires all PSAPs within a county to maintain communications capabilities with each other and all public safety agencies in the county. The bill requires each joint 911 service board existing on the effective date of the bill to submit to the department by December 31, 2026, a letter of intent to consolidate all public safety answering points within the county to one and transfer all funds, debts, contract rights, and obligations to the applicable commission by December 31, 2031. The bill also requires each county to submit a plan to the department by December 31, 2027, detailing how the county will reform or consolidate within the required time frame. The bill provides that an employee employed by a public safety answering point that is discontinued due to consolidation must be given a hiring preference for one year following the employee’s last date of employment with the public safety answering point for any similar position with another public safety answering point in Iowa. The bill provides that a county that contains more than one public safety answering point after December 31, 2031, is only allocated $1.00 out of the $1.20 surcharge implemented under Code section 34A.7A, as amended by the bill. The bill directs the remaining allocation to be distributed evenly to all other compliant counties. The consolidation requirements of the bill do not apply to counties with only one public safety answering point or to public safety answering points operated by the national guard, any branch of the armed forces of the United States, or the department of public safety. The bill requires the transfer of all funds, debts, contract rights, and obligations of each joint 911 service board to the local emergency management commission by December 31, 2031. The bill provides that the local emergency management commission and its member political subdivisions are responsible for the costs of providing 911 service. The bill directs property tax revenues to support PSAP operations to be paid only to the commission that operates the primary PSAP serving the political subdivision. Under current law, there is a surcharge of $1.00 per month on each access line and originating service number for purposes of supporting 911 service. The bill increases this surcharge to $1.20 per month and makes conforming changes. Under current law, joint 911 service boards have numerous duties, powers, and responsibilities concerning 911 services. The bill requires local emergency management commissions to take over the current joint 911 service boards’ responsibilities, including the maintenance of a 911 service plan, strikes provisions concerning formation of joint 911 service boards, waivers, and alternatives to joint 911 service boards, and makes certain conforming changes to signify this transfer. The bill continues existing requirements that PSAP cost and expense data be submitted annually to the program manager, and applies the statutory allocation reductions and reversion consequences to a commission that fails to timely submit required information. Division I of the bill takes effect upon enactment. DIVISION II —— CONFORMING CHANGES. The bill makes conforming changes, in addition to the changes made in division I of the bill, to signify local emergency management commissions taking over the duties, powers, and responsibilities of joint 911 service boards. Division II of the bill takes effect upon enactment.
AI Summary
This bill aims to consolidate and streamline the management of public safety answering points (PSAPs), which are the centers that receive 911 calls, by transferring responsibilities from existing joint 911 service boards to local emergency management commissions (LEMCs). Key provisions include requiring LEMCs to develop five-year plans for 911 infrastructure and report on personnel and equipment, mandating PSAPs that access criminal justice information to comply with federal and state security policies, and limiting each county to a single PSAP unless specific exceptions apply, such as those operated by the National Guard or federal military branches. The bill also mandates that cities spanning multiple counties must establish agreements for 911 call allocation, and all PSAPs within a county must maintain communication with each other and with public safety agencies. Furthermore, existing joint 911 service boards must submit plans by December 31, 2026, to consolidate all PSAPs within their county to one by December 31, 2031, and transfer all their assets and liabilities to the LEMC by the same date, with counties also needing to submit reform plans by December 31, 2027. Employees of discontinued PSAPs will receive a hiring preference for one year, and counties that fail to consolidate by the deadline will face a significant reduction in their share of the 911 surcharge, which is also increased from $1.00 to $1.20 per month per access line. The bill also clarifies that LEMCs and their member political subdivisions are responsible for 911 service costs, and property tax revenues for PSAP operations will be paid directly to the LEMC operating the primary PSAP.
Committee Categories
Budget and Finance
Sponsors (0)
No sponsors listed
Other Sponsors (1)
Local Government (Senate)
Last Action
Subcommittee: Schultz, Dawson, and Dotzler. S.J. 394. (on 02/24/2026)
Official Document
bill text
bill summary
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bill summary
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bill summary
| Document Type | Source Location |
|---|---|
| State Bill Page | https://www.legis.iowa.gov/legislation/BillBook?ga=91&ba=SF2458 |
| BillText | https://www.legis.iowa.gov/docs/publications/LGI/91/attachments/SF2458.html |
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