Solutions for the massive robocall epidemic in the U.S. are coming, but not soon enough, according to the Federal Communications Commission and some consumer advocates.

After two months of discussions and more than 100 meetings, the Robocall Strike force, a group composed of more than 30 major telecom companies dedicated to combating robocalls, answered the FCC’s call to fight the problem. The group, made up of companies including AT&T T, -0.33% , Google GOOGL, -1.45% , Apple AAPL, -1.10% , LG and Samsung, presented its plan for change this week, which included expanded consumer education and tools to be implemented to block calls.

Despite the progress, FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler said the team has a long way to go.

“We are not yet where we want to be,” he said. “We’ve not reached the goal. We need solutions now.”

World Series: Cubs hosting first series games since 1945

The strike force’s plan includes a new website hosted by the FCC that offers consumers resources for blocking robocalls and outlines countermeasure tools. The new measures include enhanced verification standards to spot spoofed phone numbers and a plan create a “Do Not Originate” database that logs illegitimate numbers. In one trial run, the Do Not Originate technology had a 90% success rate in blocking fake IRS calls, but it’s not yet available for consumers at large. Many of these tools were already in development but were accelerated due to the FCC’s request, the report said. The strike force also asked for more guidance from the FCC on what calls are legal to block. Emergency weather and political calls, for example, cannot be blocked, making it difficult to block all automated calls outright.

Maureen Mahoney is the lead policy analyst for Consumers Union’s End Robocalls campaign, which has garnered more than 750,000 consumer supporters. She attended the FCC meeting on Wednesday and called the strike force’s actions “incomplete.” The Consumers Union is the advocacy arm of product-review magazine Consumer Reports. With robocalls spiraling out of control in the last few years, reaching 2.61 billion calls in September 2016 alone, consumers need real solutions now.

“We would like to see tangible solutions for consumers so they can get relief from robocalls,” she said. “The onus should not be on consumers to deal with the problem. We would really like to see commitments to provide these tools immediately.”

Alex Algard, founder and chief executive of robocall protection tool Hiya, said the task force has made significant progress in a short period of time, but technology needs to be updated on an industry-wide level.

“Although the industry achieved as much as could be done within the 60 day window, most of the work still remains,” he said. “The follow-up strike force meeting taking place in another 6 months will be even more important than yesterday’s meeting.”

A recent analysis of call-blocking services from Consumer Reports found that companies offer the best call-blocking options for internet-based phone services like Vonage and Ooma, but traditional landline and wireless customers still have insufficient tools.