Cost of payphone--public emergency telephones [telecom]

Cost of payphone--public emergency telephones [telecom]

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Subject Author Date
Cost of payphone--public emergency telephones [telecom] hancock4 02-17-2008
Posted by on February 17, 2008, 11:04 am
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In the 1960s the Bell System began to offer a service of public
emergency telephones that connected to a central emergency
switchboard. The Bell System provided and maintained the network.
This had the advantage of the older telegraph call boxes in which the
caller could give specific information as to the location and nature
of the emergency.

Today, many college campuses have "blue light" boxes with intercoms to
campus security. Some cities (like NYC) have street corner intercom
posts for that purpose as well.

Some places, such as passenger railway authorities, use public
payphones to double as emergency call boxes. Callers may use such
phones as a normal pay phone (and people still do to this day), or
they could use the phone to call 911 coin free.

The phone company then and now would only install a payphone if the
expected revenues would meet their costs. If not, the property owner
would have to make up the difference. Presumably in the case of
transit agencies, they are paying that difference in many locations.

Would anyone know what the cost is for a public phone (baby Bell
company-provided) standard payphone is these days?

Any other comments toward public safety emergency call boxes would be
appreciated. Thanks!

P.S. Obvously the use of cell phones has reduced the need for pay
phones, including emergency use. But a hard wired pay phone transmits
the exact location immediately while a cell phone does not. Often
cell phones may be discharged or lost or not operable, and plenty of
people don't own cell phones.

[public replies, please]


Pure Networks
Posted by Robert Bonomi on February 17, 2008, 9:12 pm
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>In the 1960s the Bell System began to offer a service of public
>emergency telephones that connected to a central emergency
>switchboard. The Bell System provided and maintained the network.
>This had the advantage of the older telegraph call boxes in which the
>caller could give specific information as to the location and nature
>of the emergency.
>
>Today, many college campuses have "blue light" boxes with intercoms to
>campus security. Some cities (like NYC) have street corner intercom
>posts for that purpose as well.
>
>Some places, such as passenger railway authorities, use public
>payphones to double as emergency call boxes. Callers may use such
>phones as a normal pay phone (and people still do to this day), or
>they could use the phone to call 911 coin free.
>
>The phone company then and now would only install a payphone if the
>expected revenues would meet their costs. If not, the property owner
>would have to make up the difference. Presumably in the case of
>transit agencies, they are paying that difference in many locations.

Not in Chicago!

_ALL_ the pay phones were pulled from CTA stations several months ago.
<wry grin>

They're disappearing from a _lot_ of other places as well. E.g. libraries,
and grocery stores.


>Would anyone know what the cost is for a public phone (baby Bell
>company-provided) standard payphone is these days?

IIRC, circa 1998 price for the armored phone was around $850.

I suspect you meant to ask what the required monthly revenue level was. :)
On that, I have -no- information.


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other useful resources:
The Federal Communications Commission (FCC)
Telecommunications Industry Association
Electronic and Software Security Products and Services
International Telecommunication Union

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