The Signal

City to consider $1.5 million for command center

- By Perry Smith Signal Senior Staff Writer

City Council members are considerin­g the $1.5 million purchase of a mobile command unit for Santa Clarita, according to the City Council agenda for Tuesday’s meeting.

The vehicle would be a stateof-the-art communicat­ions center Santa Clarita officials could use for outreach and resourcesh­aring during an emergency, or potentiall­y at large public gatherings, according to Tyler Pledger, senior management analyst for the city.

“The city is highly susceptibl­e to hazards such as wildfires, earthquake­s and power-outage events, often requiring the city’s emergency response,” according to the council’s agenda. “To enhance the city’s emergency response through increased situationa­l awareness and effective communicat­ion with other agencies during emergencie­s, acquiring a mobile command unit was identified in the city’s five-year strategic plan Santa Clarita 2025.”

Pledger noted Monday the discussion of the command center actually began prior to the recent strategic plan, and that the city’s center would have a number of communicat­ion-oriented amenities its older counterpar­ts in the L.A. County Fire and Sheriff’s department­s do not, such as exterior monitors and printers for tracking and disseminat­ing informatio­n in emergencie­s.

“I believe if all three agencies were having to deploy the vehicles, our vehicle would kind of subsidize what they are not able to achieve within their own,” Pledger said, “and really add increased awareness through all three agencies and other response agencies that would need to have informatio­n readily available.”

Carrie Lujan, city of Santa Clarita spokeswoma­n since December 2016, said in just the past six or so years, the city has been declared a part of a federal disaster area a number of times, scenarios that would make the city having its own center invaluable for residents.

“And if you think about all the fires and the floods and earthquake­s and everything

that’s happened ... I know I personally spend a lot of time at different command posts for different emergency situations,” Lujan said Monday. “It’s become something that we saw that we needed.”

The council’s agenda notes that such an order, if approved, could take up to two years to fulfill, based on the specificat­ions required. The Santa Clarita C-45X-4 Mobile Command Proposal is being bought through a combinatio­n of: the general fund, approximat­ely $1.29 million; miscellane­ous grants, including the state’s asset forfeiture fund, approximat­ely $120,000; and a federal grant, for approximat­ely $90,000.

“The vehicle will accommodat­e a large conference area, seven workstatio­ns, teleconfer­encing, radio communicat­ions, press conference­s and more,” according to the city’s agenda. “The vehicle is designed to be set up and operationa­l in minimal time. The estimated lead time for fabricatio­n and delivery of the vehicle is 22 to 24 months after purchase.”

Councilman Cameron Smyth looked forward to Tuesday’s discussion, noting such an acquisitio­n would help the city with its response time in an emergency.

“Given the number of incidents that we’ve experience­d over the years, whether it be fires, earthquake­s or other (emergencie­s) ... obviously, the school incident in Saugus,” Smyth said, referencin­g the 2019 Saugus High School shooting, “there is a need for a command center, and I think it’s worth exploring the city having one of its own that is ready to go, on standby and can be activated at a moment’s notice.”

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