Considerations for Direct Routing
This article describes considerations for emergency calling for Direct Routing users. Before reading this article, make sure you read emergency calling concepts and definitions in Plan and manage emergency calling.
To find out if Direct Routing is the right solution for your business, see Public Switched Telephone Network (PSTN) connectivity options and Plan Direct Routing.
Emergency call enablement for Direct Routing
For Direct Routing, you define emergency calling policies for users by using a Teams emergency call routing policy to define emergency numbers and their associated routing destination.
You can assign an emergency call routing policy to a Direct Routing user account, a network site, or both. When a Teams client starts or changes a network connection, Teams performs a lookup of the network site where the client is located as follows:
If an emergency call routing policy is associated with the site, then the site policy is used to configure emergency calling.
If there's no emergency call routing policy associated with the site, if the client is connected at an undefined site, or if the dialed number doesn't match any of the emergency numbers defined in the emergency call routing policy associated with the site, then the emergency call routing policy associated with the user account is used to configure emergency calling.
If the Teams client is unable to obtain an emergency call routing policy, then the user isn't enabled for emergency calling.
Dynamic emergency calling for Direct Routing
Dynamic emergency calling for Direct Routing provides the capability to configure and route emergency calls based on the current location of the Teams client. The ability to automatically route to the appropriate Public Safety Answering Point (PSAP), or to notify security desk personnel, varies depending on the country/region of the Teams user.
For Direct Routing users, dynamic location for routing emergency calls is supported only in the United States as follows:
If a Teams client for a United States Direct Routing user dynamically acquires an emergency address within the United States, that address is used for emergency routing instead of the registered address, and the call is automatically routed to the PSAP in the serving area of the address.
If a Teams client for a United States Direct Routing user doesn't dynamically acquire an emergency address within the United States, then the registered emergency address is used to help screen and route the call. Calls from Common Area Phones and Microsoft Teams Rooms route directly to the PSAP. Otherwise, the call is screened to determine if an updated address is required before connecting the caller to the appropriate PSAP.
Dynamic location for routing emergency calls is supported in Canada the same as in the United States with the following exception: all emergency calls are screened nationally before being transferred to the PSAP.
For more information, see Configure dynamic emergency calling.
Emergency call routing for Direct Routing
The emergency call routing policy for Direct Routing references an online PSTN usage, which must have the appropriate Direct Routing configuration to properly route the emergency calls to the appropriate PSTN gateway(s). In particular, you must ensure that there's an OnlineVoiceRoute for the emergency dial string. For more information, see Configure Direct Routing.
Note
Teams clients no longer prepend the "+" sign to emergency numbers; that is, +911. Consequently, Teams emergency calls no longer send a "+" preceding the 911 number. Be sure your voice route patterns reflect this change.
The ability to dynamically route emergency calls for Direct Routing users varies depending on the emergency calling network within a given country/region. There are two solutions available:
Emergency Routing Service Providers
In the United States, there are numerous certified Emergency Routing Service Providers (ERSPs) that can automatically route emergency calls based upon the location of the caller.
If an Emergency Routing Service Provider is integrated into a Direct Routing deployment, emergency calls with a dynamically acquired location are automatically routed to the Public Safety Answering Point (PSAP) serving that location.
Emergency calls without a dynamically acquired location are first screened to determine the current location of the user before connecting the call to the appropriate dispatch center based upon the updated location.
For more information, see Session Border Controllers certified for Direct Routing.
Emergency Location Identification Number applications
Session Border Controllers (SBCs) can include Emergency Location Identification Number (ELIN) applications. If an SBC ELIN application is integrated into a Direct Routing deployment, you must configure the emergency addresses and associated telephone numbers in the ELIN application, and then upload the ELIN records to the emergency calling database in the respective PSTN. Teams emergency locations with an ELIN identifier must match those within the ELIN application.
When an emergency call with a dynamically acquired location is routed to the appropriate SBC, the ELIN application:
- Parses the emergency location of the caller.
- Matches the location to an ELIN record.
- Substitutes the emergency caller's number with the ELIN phone number.
- Routes the call to the PSAP serving that location, and then the dispatchers obtain the location from the uploaded ELIN record.
Upon a call-back to the emergency number, the ELIN application does the reverse called number substitution to that of the original emergency caller.
For more information, see Session Border Controllers certified for Direct Routing.