Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Washington County planning radio upgrade within 1½ years

- TOM SISSOM

FAYETTEVIL­LE — A new emergency communicat­ions system should be in place in 12-18 months now that Washington County voters approved a temporary 0.25 percentage-point sales tax increase to pay for it.

Capt. Josh McConnell with the sheriff’s office said Thursday the county is working out the details of contracts for the work on the $8.5 million system.

Voters approved the sales tax March 3 for a period of one year, which should generate about $11 million, according to County Treasurer Bobby Hill. The money will be dedicated to buying equipment such as 12 dispatch consoles and to building infrastruc­ture including four communicat­ions towers.

McConnell said the towers will be built in the Hazel Valley area, and near Winslow, Morrow and Lincoln. He said seven of the 12 new dispatch consoles will be provided to the sheriff’s office and five to Central Emergency Medical Services.

McConnell said the county’s system, which is about 15 years old, has about 1,700 radios assigned to it. The new system may have fewer, but the number will still exceed 1,500.

The system will link to the statewide Arkansas Wireless Informatio­n Network, McConnell said. The network is used by state agencies, including the Arkansas State Police and the Game and Fish Commission, and many local law enforcemen­t agencies, fire department­s and other emergency services agencies.

Fayettevil­le police and fire department­s have been on the network for several years and Springdale is in the process of switching to a new Arkansas Wireless Informatio­n system.

In Benton County, Rogers has recently adopted the system and county agencies and the city of Siloam Springs is converting to it.

Rogers Police Chief Hayes Minor said city agencies have been active on the system since November 2018, and it has been “a significan­t upgrade.”

“The system we had been using was old, at its end-oflife,” Minor said. “The AWIN system gives us better quality of communicat­ion and better coverage.”

Minor said the system has greatly reduced dead spots, areas where the older radio system didn’t work.

“Even in a city the size of Rogers, with relatively flat terrain, we had some areas where we had no coverage or it was scratchy,” he said.

Benton County agencies, including the sheriff’s office, road department and emergency services, are working on switching to the network system at a cost of about $3.3 million, according to Maj. Kenneth Paul with the sheriff’s office.

Paul said the county system will be linked to seven towers in the county, with two of those in Rogers and one in Siloam Springs. He said Motorola, the company installing the system, has guaranteed coverage for over 98% of the county for the handheld radios carried by officers and close to 100% for mobile radios installed in vehicles.

“We had places in the county, especially in eastern Benton County, where we had no coverage at all,” Paul said of the old system. “When you were leaving town and going into those areas, you called dispatch and let them know you were going to be off the air.”

Paul said the new system also provides features to improve safety for officers in the field.

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