Comm Center News
Text to 911 now available through W-Y Communications (CO)
The W-Y Communications Center has Text to 911 fully implemented and available to the public to utilize. Text to 911 is the ability to send SMS text messages to your local 911 emergency dispatch center during a crisis. Text to 911 should only be used in an...
Public Safety Advocate: 3GPP Mission-Critical Working Group, MCPTT Standards, T-Band
This week we begin with comments about The FirstNet Authority blog concerning 3GPP and my comments on the 3GPP MCPTT standard and devices in the market today. Next up is the delay in the Senate’s passing of the repeal of the T-Band giveback due to one Senator and hopes for new Majority FCC Commissioners who truly care about how spectrum is used and who needs it instead of doling it out to commercial interests to the detriment of critical-communications systems.
3GPP Mission-Critical Update
People who, like me, are interested in the mission-critical segment of the 3GPP standards for both 4G (LTE) and 5G networks commented on last week’s Advocate and agreed that sifting through the 3GPP website is quite difficult. Several people pointed out that The FirstNet Authority with FirstNet (Built with AT&T) is the only United States network participating in development of 3GPP’s mission-critical standards. According to multiple sources, while Verizon, T-Mobile, and the Competitive Carriers Association (CCA) support 3GPP, they have not taken an active role in the development of solutions for mission-critical issues that impact the public-safety community and others whose communications needs are critical.
The 3GPP established the SA6 (Mission-Critical) group in 2015 based on work done by the Public Safety (PSCR) and FirstNet. I have been unable to find a complete list of participating companies, but this link shows which companies have been directly involved. While Verizon recently announced its Mission-Critical Push-To-Talk (MCPTT) offering from Ericsson, it apparently had no interest in working with the 3GPP group that crafted the standard it is now promoting. T-Mobile already has a robust push-to-talk offering and I cannot find any reference to T-Mobile plans to implement MCPTT. Further, you might recall that prior to FirstNet, T-Mobile and Sprint were fighting public safety and asking Congress to auction the “D Block,” which has become a vital part of the success of FirstNet Band14.
It continues to amaze me that networks including Verizon and T-Mobile that did not bid on the FirstNet RFP to build and operate the FirstNet network are now trying to win over (or back) public-safety users. Once it became evident that public-safety agencies were joining FirstNet (Built with AT&T) in large numbers, they suddenly came alive. Now they are attempting to compete with FirstNet by implementing a Push-To-Talk (PTT) standard they had nothing to do with.
Mission-Critical Push-To-Talk
My comments last week about the MCPTT standard not being “ready for prime time” drew a number of responses. One person who posted in the “comment” section below my column on AllThingsFirstNet.com said, “You think MCPTT standards are taking a long time? You are aware the P25 standards are still being amended with new functionality (example – patch and simulselect, a basic function used by all agencies is still not supported across the ISSI). It’s been close to 20 years so don’t expect miracles with MCPTT. AT&T is supporting MCPTT as are other carriers and we all hope they work together to make sure users can roam between them in MCPTT mode”
I fully understand his comments and have lived through what has been about twenty-five years of P25 progress and yes, there are still issues to be addressed. However, even from the beginning when vendors were building non-standard P25 systems so their competitors could not bid on add-on equipment, the systems could communicate with any and all devices on the network. While P25 was slow to evolve, there is a huge difference between a standard that can be used on any Land Mobile Radio (LMR) band assigned to public safety and a standard that works on a nationwide network.
P25 networks are local, regional, and statewide. Within each system, the radios operate together and can communicate with each other. Today, after all this time, there is true interoperability between vendors’ products, which is as it should be, and there are still things that need to be addressed. However, with MCPTT on a nationwide public-safety broadband network, half of the devices on the network (iOS) cannot communicate with other devices (Android) on the network. If P25 was designed to operate on a nationwide network from day one, it would be about the same as MCPTT with its multiple interoperability issues. My issue is that we have seven or more PTT systems approved on FirstNet, including MCPTT. All of the other PTT applications serve all the different makes and models of both iOS and Android devices.
The FirstNet network is designed to provide a consistent nationwide broadband network dedicated to the public-safety community that can be accessed wherever services are needed. The physical network is mostly in place as are the devices. However, we are not finished with the rest of what is needed in the way of PTT and common sharable applications to provide a fully-interoperable public-safety network. We will get there, but sometimes when too many groups and organizations that mean well attempt to solve the same problem, it does not result in a timely solution. To support public safety, we have to provide the tools they need when they are needed.
T-Band
The U.S. Congress will soon be a lame-duck Congress as is normal after an election. Regardless of who wins what, those who currently hold seats in the Senate will be Senators through the end of the year. Meanwhile, as required by law, the FCC is working toward auctioning spectrum that is of critical importance to eleven metro areas and their surrounding suburbs. The House has passed the “Repeal the T-Band Giveback Bill (H.R. 451) but a single Texas senator who wants an amendment to the Senate version of the bill prevented it from reaching a vote on the floor.
I have to wonder what is to come. Our current President is running on “law and order” and has been endorsed by many public-safety organizations and unions. Yet, for whatever reason, a single Senator of the same party has decided to place millions of lives at risk. If these eleven metro areas lose this spectrum there will be neither money nor spectrum to move them off the T-Band. What I find most annoying is that this Senator represents a state that is home to one of the cities that will lose use of this spectrum.
The sitting FCC has already jeopardized critical-communications capabilities on the 6-GHz microwave band by permitting unlicensed WiFi 6 to be used throughout the band. Further, it has decided the public-safety community can do without another 50 MHz of spectrum in the 4.9-GHz band. As a result, the three majority Commissioners, in their wisdom, ruled that this spectrum will be allocated to each state so the states can lease it out, perhaps with protections for existing public-safety users. Finally, the FCC moved to permit Ligado to build a 5G Internet of Things (IoT) terrestrial network in spectrum reserved for satellite communications that is much too close to Global Positioning System (GPS) spectrum. Many federal, state, and local agencies voiced opposition to Ligado’s proposed network but they were ignored.
It is time to replace today’s three majority Commissioners with three new ones who will take time to investigate how spectrum allocations will impact users today and into the future. The two minority Commissioners seem to fully understand this.
Let’s push the Senate to pass a simple bill with no associated costs before the end of the year to ensure that our public-safety agencies can remain on the T-Band and further expand their radio systems.
[NOTE: I just received word that there may be light in the Senate chambers but more needs to be determined. It appears the rogue Senator from Texas who held up the plan to repeal the T-Band bill is now agreeable to re-engaging with consideration of the “Frontier Bill,” which would also either include or preclude (not clear) the Department of Defense (DOD) building its own 5G nationwide network. I will stay on top of this ever-changing situation as it unfolds.]
Winding Down
As mentioned in a previous Advocate, it appears part or all of the current Administration is still putting forward the idea of a federalized 5G network that would be built and run by the feds, perhaps the DOD, and leased out to other carriers, businesses, or whatever. Meanwhile, the U.S. Army’s Installation Management Command (IMCOM) recently inked a deal with FirstNet (Built with AT&T) to support seventy-two installations.
It looks like the Army understands better than the DOD that FirstNet was created for federal organizations including the U.S. Coast Guard and the U.S. Army as well as local and state first responders. One quote from the announcement attributed to a U.S. Army spokesperson sums it up this way:
“Just like your local municipalities, the Army installations around the country have police, fire, EMS and other emergency services,” Singer said: “They will be able to leverage FirstNet, so that they can improve the safety of the people and the workforce they have on the post.
Just as important, it allows them to have interoperability with the local municipalities that are outside the base. Often, an event that happens on the base or near the base is jointly responded to by the base personnel, as well as local communities’ first responders. There are no alternatives available to the federal government that comply with all (not some) of the capabilities that are provided in the public-safety broadband network known as FirstNet,” according to a September 2018 document justifying the contract.”
According to the article, this contract will provide 3,200 FirstNet connections, more than 3,000 devices, and 700 signal boosters to enhance connection inside the facilities. I hope this type of contract with FirstNet will put an end to the idea of the federal government building a nationwide 5G network. The main reason FirstNet has been successful in providing services and devices for state, local, and federal agencies is that while being overseen by an “Independent Authority” (The FirstNet Authority) that reports to the National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA), FirstNet has its own board of directors, staff, and funding. I cannot imagine what FirstNet would be today if the federal government had decided to undertake the task of building out the network and securing users.
A common issue with direct federal involvement has always been the disruption that occurs every four years after a Presidential election. Even if the same party remains in power, there is a huge turnover in personnel who tend to move back into the private sector being replaced with people who might see things differently—but may not understand the history of why networks are better off being built by private enterprise (among other things).
A look back at the cellular industry proves this point. Many countries including Japan, France, the U.K., and others started out with government-owned cellular networks. This seemed to work well since they usually did not have to bother with the red tape involved in permitting sites and other necessities. However, it became clear early on that a single network run by the government was not the way to lower the cost of the network or cost to users. After only a few years, these networks were privatized and other private network operators were permitted to compete for the business. The nations’ businesses and citizens were the winners.
Looking back at history can sometimes keep us from making mistakes a second or even third time!
Until next week…
Andrew M. Seybold©2020, Andrew Seybold, Inc.
Mt. Vernon Police Department welcomes new 911 dispatcher (IL)
he Mt. Vernon Police Department would like to welcome their newest telecommunicator (911 dispatcher) Javier Ruiz-Roubert. He will be answering 911 calls, dispatching police, fire, and EMS that are within the city. Javier brings experience to this position having...
Clutz named Telecommunicator of the Year (IL)
Telecommunicator Roberta Clutz has been received an honor from Illinois State Police by being named as Telecommunicator of the Year recently. Clutz has served the Illinois State Police for more than 16 years as a telecommunicator specialist, beginning her career in...
“Glitter bomb” sent to an employee of the Luzerne County 911 Communications Center (PA)
PLAINS TOWNSHIP, LUZERNE COUNTY (WBRE/WYOU-TV) — An investigation has begun into a package sent to the Luzerne County 911 Center. That package was a “glitter bomb”, shooting glitter all over when opened. And, county officials say it’s no laughing matter. Luzerne...
Shrewsbury voters to be asked to approve $42 million for public safety complex (MA)
Shrewsbury – Town Meeting members met for a Special Town Meeting Sept. 29 to vote on a measure to approve $42 million debt exclusion to fund a new police station and public safety radio system. That request was resoundingly approved. Next, the voters will have their...
Mansfield 911 operator H. Lee Robinson retiring (OH)
MANSFIELD - H. Lee Robinson announced his retirement from the Mansfield Division of Police effective Tuesday as a 911 operator. Robinson was hired by the Mansfield Fire Department on July 8, 1988 as a dispatcher and transferred to the Public Safety Communications...
Plummeting revenues threaten planned public safety building (CA)
With the local economy shaken and city revenues on a steep decline, Palo Alto is preparing to reconsider its most ambitious infrastructure project: the new public safety building that is slated to go up in the California Avenue business district. The city has recently...
911 dispatchers receive over 500 calls on Saturday after Harrisonburg explosion (VA)
HARRISONBURG, Va. (WHSV) - Local 911 dispatchers said they felt the Harrisonburg explosion at the Harrisonburg-Rockingham Emergency Communications Center on Saturday and within seconds, got a call volume like no other. On Saturday between 8:20 a.m. and 3 p.m., HRECC...
KSP Post 3 welcomes new Telecommunicator (KY)
BOWLING GREEN, Ky. - Twelve Kentucky State Police telecommunicators from throughout the Commonwealth were recognized at graduation ceremonies for the sixteenth class of the agency’s in-house Telecommunications Academy. The Post 3 graduate of the 16th KSP...
Serious issues persist at Tucson’s 911 call center (AZ)
TUCSON, Ariz. (KOLD News 13) - A just released report (which you can find here) paints a dysfunctional operation at the Public Safety Communications Department in Tucson. The PSCD dispatches 911 calls for both police and fire departments. The Tucson City Manager,...
KSP gets 12 new ‘voices of calm’ for in the midst of the storm (KY)
CAMPBELLSBURG, Ky. (WTVQ) – Twelve Kentucky State Police telecommunicators from throughout the Commonwealth were recognized at graduation ceremonies for the 16th class of the agency’s in-house Telecommunications Academy. KSP Commissioner Rodney Brewer told the...
Tuscaloosa County Emergency Operations Center now has ‘Text-to-911’ service (AL)
Public safety in Tuscaloosa County has been upgraded with a new way to contact 911. Like many 911 centers across the nation, agencies part of the Tuscaloosa County Emergency Operations Center can now accept inbound messages and send outbound messages via text,...
Pontiac Telecommunicator honored by Illinois State Police (IL)
SPRINGFIELD – The Illinois State Police have announced their choice for Telecommunicator of the Year. Telecommunicator Specialist Roberta Clutz Telecommunicator Roberta Clutz has served the Illinois State Police for more than 16 years as a Telecommunicator Specialist....
Advanced Communications: Lyon County’s emergency radio system upgrade now complete (KS)
Roxanne Van Gundy and other members of the 911 Radio Project Committee knew the Lyon County Emergency Communications Center was due for an upgrade. While the county still operated with an analog radio system that was all but obsolete, more than 70 percent of the...
Survival Flight Rejoices in Dispatcher Recovery (MO)
Shelby County 911 Dispatcher Chris Rich was recognized by Survival Flight on Friday, Oct. 9 for her dedication to the community at 911. On Aug. 24, Rich was getting ready to work a shift at the Shelby County dispatch center when she experienced a...
Nevada Department of Public Safety appoints first woman to NHP colonel command (NV)
CARSON CITY — Nevada Department of Public Safety Director George Togliatti has appointed Anne Carpenter as Colonel of the Nevada DPS, Highway Patrol Division. Colonel Carpenter officially takes command of the Nevada Highway Patrol on Monday, October 19, 2020. She will...
Supporting Communities in Need and Increasing Officer Safety with FirstNet
By Harry Markley, Senior Law Enforcement Advisor, First Responder Network Authority
Protect and serve, that is the motto of many law enforcement agencies across the nation. Every day, officers and deputies work in our communities handling incidents ranging from traffic violations to someone’s worst day. Each day is a new day with new challenges, but the “protect and serve” motto never changes.
Technology has evolved significantly, providing a cache of new tools for first responders in the field. Law enforcement agencies across the country are turning to technology for innovative ways to protect and serve their communities. With FirstNet – the only nationwide broadband network built for public safety – officers have secure, reliable access to apps and devices that help them in their everyday duties. Discover how two agencies are using technology to provide care to their communities and how FirstNet can support these advanced capabilities. READ MORE
Texting 9-1-1 is Now Available in Humboldt County (CA)
The Humboldt County Sheriff's Office announced today that texting 9-1-1 for emergencies is now available in unincorporated areas of Humboldt County, the city of Fortuna, Arcata, Humboldt State University and California Highway Patrol (other local cities will be...
Shenandoah County Sheriff’s Office moves into new building (VA)
SHENANDOAH COUNTY, Va. (WHSV) - After more than three years of work, the Shenandoah County Sheriff Office has officially moved into the department’s new building. Sheriff Timothy Carter said for more than 50 years, the sheriff’s office has served the community from...
Upcoming Webinar
4.9 GHz Band: Review of the FCC Order
On October 22, 2024, the Federal Communications Commission (Commission) released its Eighth Report and Order (Eighth R&O) regarding utilization of the 4940-4990 MHz (4.9 GHz) band that protects incumbent users as requested by us, the Public Safety Spectrum Alliance (PSSA). This Eighth R&O addresses a number of issues related to the use of this band by public safety. Please join us for a briefing on this order and how it impacts public safety.
This presentation will be led by Chief Jeff Johnson (ret) and Attorney Jason Karp, one of the nation’s leading experts in public safety spectrum regulations.
REGISTER
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