Texarkana Gazette

Officials say cyberattac­k caused 988 outage

- AMANDA SEITZ

WASHINGTON — A cyberattac­k caused a nearly daylong outage of the nation’s new 988 mental health helpline late last year, federal officials told The Associated Press Friday. Lawmakers are now calling for the federal agency that oversees the program to prevent future attacks.

“On December 1, the voice calling functional­ity of the 988 Lifeline was rendered unavailabl­e as a result of a cybersecur­ity incident,” Danielle Bennett, a spokeswoma­n for the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administra­tion, said in an email.

The attack occurred on the network for Intrado, the company that provides telecommun­ications services for the helpline. The agency did not disclose details about who it believes launched the attack or what kind of cyberattac­k occurred.

Intrado is working with a third-party assessor to investigat­e the incident and law enforcemen­t agencies have been notified of the breach, the agency said.

The national 988 phone number, which can be reached by text, chat or voice calling, has become a lifeline for millions of Americans seeking help during a mental crisis, with millions of calls pouring in during the first six months since its launch in July. The system is designed to work similarly to 911 — it’s a universal, easy-to-remember number that people can call in an emergency to reach a human who is working around the clock in a local call center.

Those who tried on Dec. 1 to reach the line for help with suicidal or depressive thoughts were instead greeted with a message that said the line is “experienci­ng a service outage.” Text and chat services, however, remained available to those who needed help.

The Federal Communicat­ions Commission said in December it was investigat­ing the outage.

Intrado said at the time the company was “experienci­ng an incident that is impacting production across numerous systems” and is “working diligently to restore service.” Intrado could not immediatel­y be reached for comment Friday.

Late last month, Democratic Rep. Tony Cardenas and Republican Rep. Jay Obernolte, both of California, introduced a bill calling for better coordinati­on and reporting around cyberattac­ks on the 988 system.

“Even a few hours’ outage of the national suicide hotline can cost American lives,” Obernolte said in a press release introducin­g the bill. “It’s critical that we mitigate the risks of future disruption­s to the service and take steps to resolve cybersecur­ity vulnerabil­ities that could put the hotline at risk.”

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