The Oklahoman

SLICING THE `SAFETY BAND'

A proposed FCC rule change could delay response times for fire trucks, ambulances

- By Dale Denwalt Staff writer ddenwalt@oklahoman.com

Every moment counts when someone's home is ablaze, and John Smith has some high-tech help to make sure his fire truck hits green lights just right.

Smith, a member of Tulsa Firefighte­rs Local 176, can't be stuck at a red light or trapped in a jam-up of vehicles awaiting the traffic signal to change. A fire can double in size every two minutes, he said.

"If we get stuck behind traffic, it can significan­tly delay us and give that fire time to grow," Smith said.

Thanks to a technology called the “safety band,” Smith's truck – like many other emergency vehicles, can remotely operate traffic lights to ensure speed in case of an emergency.

"When I grab control of that light, not only does it turn green for me, but it turns green for ( other cars in the way). It stops all other lanes of traffic and allows them to clear through the intersecti­on, get in single file and move over to the side," he said.

But a recent proposal by the Federal Communicat­ions Commission could as soon as mid-November allow unlicensed Wi-Fi users to access the technology – potentiall­y creating a communicat­ions logjam on remote frequencie­s used by first-responders.

Slicing the spectrum

The safety band is one part of the electromag­netic spectrum regulated by the FCC. Most of the frequencie­s are invisible to the naked eye, and include microwave and radio frequencie­s whose wavelength­s are shorter than that of infrared, ultraviole­t and visible light.

In 1999, FCC set aside 75 MHz of the radio spectrum for transporta­tion-related public safety use. Technology has been developed allowing vehicles to speak to each other, and speak to infrastruc­ture, like traffic signals, by using those frequencie­s.

Twenty years later, the proposed rule could slice the band nearly in two, leaving less than half of that space for connected vehicles like emergency services.

The commission could vote to implement the rule as early as Nov. 18.

FCC Chairman Ajit Pai said the safety band hasn't been widely deployed, and referred to it as a dormant spectrum. The plan is to basically open a swath of that electromag­netic real estate for unlicensed wireless operators to use. This could be used for virtually anything that needs space to transmit signals, like your car's key fob, garage door openers and interconne­cted electronic­s.

"It has become a foundation­al technology for the Internet of Things, connecting virtually any device or appliance you can think of. Wi-Fi currently carries more than half of the Internet's traffic, and that share will only grow in the future," Pai said when introducin­g the proposed rule change.

But the U.S. Department of Transporta­tion says the safety band is far from dormant with 50% growth over the past three years. There are 97 locations nationwide are actively using it, with another 66 sites in the planning stage, the agency reported.

A senior federal government official familiar with the proposal said the safety band can't realistica­lly operate within that narrower range.

"That's not enough to do all the different things you do on the safety band," said the official, who asked not to be identified to speak candidly about what they see as the dangers of reallocati­ng the spectrum. "The problem is that the FCC is prioritizi­ng the profits of large technology companies ahead of the lives of first responders."

Safety band in use

In Atlanta, there are plans to deploy connected vehicle technology to more than 1,000 intersecti­ons. Transporta­tion officials in Maryland have launched several projects in busy areas.

Retired Oklahoma County Sheriff John Whetsel wrote to the FCC on behalf of the National Sheriffs' Associatio­n and urged the agency to reconsider. He said there haven't been tests to see how it would affect existing safety systems, and that the split would interrupt developmen­t of new projects.

"With increased and improved technology, law enforcemen­t will be increasing­ly dependent on the ability to communicat­e over frequencie­s in the (safety band) with an ever-growing number of devices in order to operate safely in an environmen­t with other vehicles," he wrote in March.

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 ?? [THE OKLAHOMAN ARCHIVES] ?? Some emergency vehicles, such as fire trucks or ambulances, can remotely operate many traffic lights thanks to technology that operates on a small section of the electromag­netic spectrum known as the “safety band.”
[THE OKLAHOMAN ARCHIVES] Some emergency vehicles, such as fire trucks or ambulances, can remotely operate many traffic lights thanks to technology that operates on a small section of the electromag­netic spectrum known as the “safety band.”

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