Make this page my home page

  1. Drag the home icon in this panel and drop it onto the "house icon" in the tool bar for the browser

  2. Select "Yes" from the popup window and you're done!

True North Announces Firefighter Training Scholarship
FireRescue1 - News, products and training resources

Homeland Security Secretary Chertoff puts interoperability on fast track in cities

Most Popular Articles

Sign up for FREE Email Newsletters

Enter your email below

Communications and Interoperability Article

Print CommentRegisterBookmarkRSSWhat's This

Homeland Security Secretary Chertoff puts interoperability on fast track in cities

By Alice Lipowicz, Staff Writer
Washington Technology
Copyright 2006 Post-Newsweek Media, Inc.
All Rights Reserved

WAHSINGTON D.C. — Forty-six U.S. cities should have interoperable communications in place for first responders by the end of 2007, Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff said Tuesday.

All 50 states should aim to have interoperable systems for public safety by the end of 2008," Chertoff said during a keynote speech at the National Grants and Training Conference in Washington.

Fostering interoperable communications systems for first responders has been a goal of the Homeland Security Department since Congress created it four years ago. The goal is to allow police and fire departments of multiple jurisdictions to talk to one another in real time in responding to a major incident.

Disparate radio systems prevent that from happening in most communities.

DHS will assist 46 cities, receiving grants through the Urban Area Security Initiative, in obtaining digital equipment and technical specifications to achieve interoperable communications by Dec. 31, 2007, and for all 50 states, Dec. 31, 2008, Chertoff said. The cities will get interoperability score cards next month to show their statuses, he said.

"We have the first generation of equipment," Chertoff said. "We know that what's needed at this point is finishing the governance plans and the documents, and we also know that we need to complete the job of getting the specifications for the next generation of digital equipment out there, so you can complete the process of being able to do your own planning for your next generation of purchases."

DHS will offer guidance to communities to help them set priorities for interoperable communications in their applications for federal homeland security grants in fiscal 2007, Chertoff said.

In related comments, Chertoff said the department will carry out President Bush's executive order to create a comprehensive system to alert the public in the event of a national emergency. The goal is to be able to warn 85 percent of the "listening public" within 10 minutes, he said. The public warning system needs new technologies, he said.

LexisNexis Copyright © 2010 LexisNexis, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.   
Terms and Conditions Privacy Policy
"We have text messaging. We have the Internet. We have digital cable. We have satellite television. We have to upgrade the patchwork system and build one that is national in scope for the 21st century," Chertoff said.



Most Commented Articles
 1.  NY chief, firefighter arrested for holding man at gunpoint
 2.  Ex-DC fire chief regrets integrating fire, EMS
 3.  Making Rehab a Requirement: NFPA 1584
 4.  Report: Reckless conduct endangers America's fire service
 5.  Device to predict flashover in development
 6.  Ranch home dangers
 7.  'Old school tactics' questioned after Charleston, S.C., fire
 8.  How to buy incident management tools
 9.  Protecting Exposures
 10.  Maine fire officials frustrated by communications issues