Daily Times (Primos, PA)

HELP IS ON THE WAY

COUNTY TO MOVE ON NEW POLICE RADIO SYSTEM

- By Kathleen E. Carey kcarey@21st-centurymed­ia.com @dtbusiness on Twitter

Delaware County Council plans to vote on requests for proposals for an overhaul of the county emergency communicat­ions systems Wednesday - a project that’s expected to cost more than $50 million and equip first responders with effective, reliable technology to serve the community.

Delaware County’s Emergency Services Director Tim Boyce said council will be considerin­g putting out a request for proposals for the new system.

In the fall of 2019, the county 911 center noted four or five separate instances in which emergency personnel were not able to reach the county 911 center with their portable radios because of a situation called “ducting.” As emergency responders use a 500 T-band frequency, signals bounce back under certain weather conditions like heavy cloud cover and police and firefighte­rs can have a difficult time getting through. This interferen­ce occurs because of television transmissi­ons.

To address this, council approved more than $1 million in upgrades, including buying 150 Zebra EVM XPLORE 10-inch tablets in January 2020 while council recognized a larger investment was going to be needed.

Earlier this year, brand new mobile Kenwood radios were distribute­d to 1,200 full- and part-time police officers and 800 firefighte­rs. Two-hundred are being disbursed to Emergency Medical Services personnel and other emergency management and special operations units. These devices use a two-band system that allow users to operate outside of the band causing interferen­ce.

And, now, the county is anticipate­d to move ahead with the creation and installati­on of a new radio system.

“The best practice has been to write a thorough, detailed and achievable specificat­ion that can be built,” Boyce said, adding that only high-level national radio manufactur­ers will be able to meet Delaware County’s needs.

Boyce said if council approves the RFP’s, the manufactur­ers who respond will have about two to three months to present their best designs with the goal of having county staff and elected officials choosing a manufactur­er in December.

“We’re very confident that at the point we’re at, we’ll be able to get competitiv­e bids from high-level manufactur­ers,” Boyce said.

He has been working with various stakeholde­rs to prepare as thorough of a bid as possible to eliminate the need for costly change orders later in the process.

Boyce explained that the emergency communicat­ions system has two parts. One is the infrastruc­ture such as the computers and the radio towers and second is the subscriber­s such as the police officer, firefighte­r and medic on the street.

“Our system needs to be very robust,” he said, adding that all of the components must be compatible with each other. “We want to make sure that one fits the other. We don’t want to) buy a feature that they don’t want. We don’t get a feature that is not critical to their success.”

The first part of this was county council’s $3 million purchase of radios for emergency responders, Boyce explained.

“This is the first time the county has bought the radios that police officers have,” he said, adding that every officer in the county has the same high quality radio regardless of the abundance or lack of wealth in their community.

Unfortunat­ely, Boyce said the interferen­ce problem does still exist, although it is occasional and sporadic.

He said the basic problem is television signals from South Carolina and Boston, Mass. When it’s 60 degrees in the morning and 90 degrees by 10 a.m., the temperatur­e layers make the radio waves shoot off even farther.

And, that’s why the system is being overhauled with ACD Engineers developing the technical specificat­ions for the system earlier this year.

“Obviously COVID delayed our ability to meet with people and bring in people,” Boyce said, adding, however, that his team worked to find radio towers on which they could rent space.

There’s also operationa­l difference­s among the emergency responders - a police officer uses their radios differentl­y than firefighte­rs; a police motorcycle unit is different than a bicycle unit.

All need emphasis on hearing, officer safety and functional­ity in the radios, Boyce said.

In addition, the system is zoned right now so that an officer in Chester cannot talk to an officer in Upper Darby.

The director said as the system becomes more seamless, that radio anywhere in Delaware county will be able to connect to anyone in Delaware county.

“This will improve functional­ity for both critical events and every day,” Boyce said. “Our current system is very susceptibl­e to hacking. The new system isn’t. Our new system will not have people interfere.”

He explained that this system is one that’s meant to last the next 10 to 15 years.

“Everything that we are looking to do is out there,” Boyce said. “We want the best tool that serves both our first responders and is responsibl­e to the taxpayer.”

He said there’s only four or five manufactur­ers large enough to handle a project of this size - and all of them are excited to do it.

“I don’t think we’re going to go bad with any of them,” Boyce said. “It’s just a matter of getting the best value ... At the end of the day, I can look in the mirror and say we did the best we can for the people.”

 ?? MEDIANEWS GROUP FILE PHOTO ?? The county 911 Center in Lima.
MEDIANEWS GROUP FILE PHOTO The county 911 Center in Lima.
 ?? MEDIANEWS GROUP FILE PHOTO ?? Delaware County Emergency Services Director Timothy Boyce speaks in January about the new CAT-S42phones that allow a first responder to access the county radio system via cellular service.
MEDIANEWS GROUP FILE PHOTO Delaware County Emergency Services Director Timothy Boyce speaks in January about the new CAT-S42phones that allow a first responder to access the county radio system via cellular service.

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