JPS Retreat Interoperability PowerPoint
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Transcript JPS Retreat Interoperability PowerPoint
Why Interoperability is Essential
for County Government
Jeff Arnold
NACo Deputy Legislative Director
Why Interoperability is Essential for
County Government
Operability before interoperability
What really is interoperability?
Voice, data and records
Horizontal and vertical
Who gets to decide?
How do you know where you are?
What does it have to do with
continuity?
Why Interoperability is Essential for
County Government
Things to think about…
First response
Second response
Jail
Hospital
Data
Records
Mutual aid
Why Interoperability is Essential for
County Government
Other things to think about
Offsite records retention
Out of region assistance
Other resources
Why Interoperability is Essential for
County Government
Urban/Metro assessment
Good progress
Uneven
Governance
SOPs
Training, exercise, usage
“Best Practice”
Interoperability Examples
Mike Sumnicht
Motorola
Maricopa County, AZ
Six Degrees of Interoperability
Method
Standards-Based
Shared Systems
System-Specific
Roaming
Gateway
(Console Patch)
Fit
Best Long-Term
Solution
Full-featured, Wide Area
Short-Term
System Modification
Easily deployed
Mutual Aid Channels
Talkaround
Swap Radios
Simple ShortTerm
Solutions
Time-consuming
7
San Diego County
REGIONAL COMMUNICATIONS
SYSTEM
RCS Overview
Regional Communications System
Vision
To provide seamless wireless
communications and interoperability for
public safety/service agencies serving
3,000,000 people in San Diego County and
Imperial County.
No one should lose their life or property
because public safety personnel cannot
communicate with each other.
San Diego County RCS
At a Glance
18,000 users
Over 200 agencies
68 sites
150 frequency pairs (power of sharing)
95% coverage requirement
Achieving 97%
Participants share ongoing network
operating costs
High speed mobile data to be
implemented
Regional Communications System
Proven Benefits of RCS Approach
The RCS provides key benefits to users:
Interoperability.
Improved user safety
Increased efficiency of diminishing resources.
Enhanced wireless coverage.
Enhanced disaster communications capability.
Economies of scale and scope.
Regional Communications System
Shared Governance
Partners approved a “Participating
Agency Agreement”.
San Diego County Board of Supervisors authorized RCS
Board of Directors to administer system.
Member agency representatives select
the RCS Board of Directors.
13 members: Chief/Department Head level fire, law,
public service, representing their peer agencies.
No politicians on Board of Directors.
Regional Communications System
Milestones - Timeline
December 1992
March 1995
March 1996
December 1996
May 1998
December 1999
Board of Supervisors approved
the RCS Business Plan.
Governing bodies signed the
Participating Agency Agreement.
Board authorized contract with
Motorola & financing of remaining
RCS components.
Construction of 43 radio system
transmission sites began.
Participating agencies began
using the RCS.
Project Completion - San Diego
County
Minnesota
Allied Radio Matrix for Emergency
Response (ARMER)
ARMER Overview
ARMER (Minnesota)
Phased Approach
ARMER (Minnesota)
At a Glance
Phase 1 & 2
Approximately 63 sites in 9 counties
17,000 users
158 dispatch positions at 20 centers
Phase 3
Adds 52 sites and 23 counties
Zones in Rochester and St. Cloud
Primary funding from E9-1-1 surcharge
New sources being sought
High speed mobile data to be implemented
Department of Homeland Security
Tactical Interoperable Communications
Scorecards: Summary Report and Findings
http://www.dhs.gov/xlibrary/assets/grantsscorecard-report-010207.pdf
170 page Summary and Findings Report
Early
Implementation
Intermediate
Implementation
Established
Advanced
Implementation Implementation
Department of Homeland Security
Governance
San Diego
Minn
NCR
Columbus,
OH
Sioux Falls
Laramie
County
Std. Op. Proc.
Usage
DTV / 700MHz Funding Update
No less than $1B for Public Safety Agencies for
Interoperable Communications Systems no later
than September 30, 2007
DOC/NTIA in consultation with DHS (MOU)
This program is to fund equipment that utilize
the 700 MHz spectrum band or enable other
equipment to utilize the band.
DTV / 700MHz Funding Update
20% match requirement from non-federal
sources is a condition of the grant.
Consistent with SAFECOM Guidance
Consistent with state interoperability plans and
state/urban area homeland security strategies
High risk areas to get priority for a portion of the
funding
Summary and Discussion
Interoperability requires a vision
Data and records interoperability becoming as
important as voice
Governance can be more difficult than funding
and technology
What are the other obstacles?
Contacts
Jeff Arnold
[email protected]
202-942-4286
Mike Sumnicht
[email protected]
480-596-3894
Backup slides
Regional Communications System
Parties - Cost
Local, county, state and federal participants
Agencies may join as equity partners or as customers
Currently over 200 government agencies and 13
dispatch centers receiving RCS service
SD County and Imperial County network cost: $125 M
Participants share ongoing network operating costs
Current Network Operating Charge (NOC) $26.50 per radio/month
Estimated system life is more than 15 years
Regional Communications System
Technical Summary - Data
Voice and data systems are separate networks
29 Data System Repeater sites
Motorola 800 MHz
19.2 KBPS (currently under contract to upgrade to
96KBPS)
Supports other frequency spectrum
Wireless Network Gateway
Supports TCP/IP
Permits various data applications, including AVL
Data network provides significant growth
capability
95% Coverage requirement; exceeds 97%.
Regional Communications System
User/Revenue Growth
Actual
Users
Revenue from Network
Operating Charges
1998
5,177
$225,000
1999
8,685
$1,956,115
2000
9,796
$2,250,752
2001
14,225
$3,425,323
2002
16,861
$4,619,374
Exceeds expected capacity
Forecast1
2003
18,250
$5,171,925
20072
32,000
$8,403,854
2012
34,000
$9,057,867
Regional Communications System
Wireless Design Goals
The RCS design goals:
Improve compatibility with existing 800
MHz systems.
Provide highly reliable wireless voice and
data networks.
Provide minimum 95% wireless coverage
of the roadway network.
Provide wireless data access for
computer applications, including:
Automatic Vehicle Location (AVL)
Law enforcement databases
Computerized dispatch operations