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TRANSCRIPT
IESMA Conference
Nationwide Public Safety
Broadband Network
This presentation was prepared by the Illinois SLIGP using funds under award from the
National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA), U.S. Department of
Commerce (DOC). The statements, findings, conclusions, and recommendations are those of
the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the NTIA, DOC, or FirstNet.
April 2014
Joe Galvin Illinois SWIC
Nationwide
Public Safety
Broadband
Network
What is NPSBN…
What do we know today?
Nationwide Broadband Network For Public Safety
Operated by the Federal Government
In response to the 9/11 Commission Report
Funded
Planning Money
Implementation Money
State Level Decision
Provide the Federal Government our requirements
Opt In / Opt Out
Operated by FirstNet
FirstNet - First Responder Network Authority
Empowered to build and operate a nationwide public
safety broadband network for state & local public safety
agencies.
Congress created a new Federal authority within
NTIA / Department of Commerce to control state and
local first responder broadband communications.
Established a 15-Member Board selected by NTIA
and appointed by the Secretary of Commerce.
FirstNet Essential Facts
2013 2016 2018 2012 2015
Q3 2012
FirstNet Board Established
NTIA - State and Local Planning Grant
2014 2017
Planning (Phase I Phase II)
ESTIMATED
Nationwide Build Out
2019
NTIA - RFP
States Plan Submitted
Opt-in / Opt-out
Early Adopters Build Out
FirstNet Projected Timeline
Why was FirstNet created?
9/11 Commission
Federal law
Why is FirstNet needed?
In an emergency, commercial
networks:
Fail
Why is FirstNet needed? In an emergency, commercial
networks:
Fail
Get Overloaded
Why is FirstNet needed?
Because in an emergency, commercial
networks :
Fail
Get overloaded
Don’t provide priority
access to public
safety
NPSBN
Technology
11
FirstNet LTE Architecture
Public Safety Broadband Spectrum
Middle Class Tax Relief and Job Creation Act of 2012
assigned the D-Block to Public Safety and created
FirstNet
Why LTE
Applications made possible by 4G Wireless Broadband Capacity
Text Based
Database Lookups
NCIC look-ups, RMS entries, text
messages
Low
Geographical
Information Systems
Automatic vehicle location, CAD
location display
Low to
Medium
Preplans, Building Utilities
Layers
High
Video Traffic, Helicopter, School,
Dashboard, Security,
Helmet/Lapel cams, etc. (varies
in resolution)
High to
Very High*
Telemetry, AVL Patient and responder
biometrics, offender bracelets
Low
Common Apps &
Desktop Extension
Email: varies depending on
content of messages; web
browsing: plug-ins, images,
animation affects throughput
needs
Medium to
High
NPSBN will provide the ability to Support “High” Bandwidth Applications
Applications
POTENTIAL PUBLIC SAFETY BROADBAND APPLICATIONS
Video Surveillance, Remote monitoring
streaming
Dynamic Mapping, Weather, Traffic
Remote Database Access/Queries (mug
shots, fingerprints, reporting, NCIC, CHRI,
hot files
Instant Messaging, SMS, One-way
Notifications, Tactical Chat Rooms
Multimedia Command and Control (floor
plans, incident stills, surveillance
Real Time One and Two Way Video in
Vehicles or Handhelds
Computer aided dispatch(CAD), Next
Generation 9-1-1 (NG 9-1-1-)
Geo-Location and Asset Tracking (vehicle,
personnel, assets)
Records Management Systems Access Mobile Office (bulk file transfer, e-mail,
internet web access, VPN)
Mobile Incident Command Geospatial Applications
Medical Telemetry Automated License Plate Recognition
Field Based Reporting Digital Signage, Traffic Alerts, Automated
Transactions
Remote Control of Robotic Devices Standardized Push-to-Talk (PTT) Voice over
IP
MISSION CRITICAL
BLUETOOTH
HIGH
RESOLUTION
VIDEO CAMERA
DEDICATED PTT
VOIP CLIENT
RUGGED, SEALED
ULTRA-BRIGHT
DISPLAY
Many RADIOS in ONE DEVICE
BAND 14 PUBLIC SAFETY
LTE
BAND 13 PUBLIC CARRIER
LTE
3G EVDO
CDMA
WI-FI 802.11 A/B/G/N
GPS
Many Devices to Choose From
Today/Tomorrow
Technological advances make
promises, but it is our
responsibility is to move
cautiously and not let our
judgment be clouded by hype.
Embracing change is the key to
success but only after careful
consideration and planning.
NPSBN
Challenges
FirstNet Challenges: Cost We know how much we are paying
today
Budgets are tight
If FirstNet comes at us with a premium
price well over what we are paying
today…well this makes the decision easy
Pool of users is only about 5M
Building out in Rural areas
Luckily the Law that creates FirstNet
contemplates meeting the needs of rural
users
Defining “public safety grade” Public Safety Advisory Committee
FirstNet Attribute
Coverage
Reliability
Resiliency
Defining Public Safety Grade
“Where public safety
needs it”
“You can count on it”
“Multiple back-up
options”
FirstNet Challenges - Coverage
3,250 Counties
Rural, Wilderness,
and Island coverage
60,000 Public Safety
Agencies
3.8 million square
miles 27%
68%
5% Wilderness
Rural
Suburban,Urban, DenseUrban
FirstNet Challenges - Resiliency
Physical Diverse routing of cells
Mirrored databases
Geographically distributed processing
Operational Mobile hotspots
Bring your own cell (BYOC)
Cells on Wheels (COWs, COLTs, GOATs, SOWs)
Recovering quickly after a network incident is
imperative
FirstNet Challenges -Reliability
Public safety grade design includes:
Extended life battery systems
Back up power systems
Diverse routing of cell site links (overhead,
underground, thru air)
Diverse cell site link technology (fiber, coax,
microwave, telco, optical, satellite)
The majority of cell site outages are due
to loss of power and data links
FirstNet is Working on it
Listening to Public Safety
Requesting Comment
State by State
NPSTC
PSAC
APCO
Listening to Industry
Leveraging how we have been building
robust LMR networks
NPSBN
Illinois
Illinois FirstNet
IEMA working through the State CIO
Single POC
Use the information to aid in understanding the
needs and requirements of Illinois public safety
agencies and first responders.
Recommendation to the Governor after we
secure input on needs from all Public Safety and
Public Service
State
Local
Federal
Non – Government
In Out
Illinois Planning Objectives
PHASE I
Secure Planning Grant;
Develop a Written Plan;
Leverage existing governance structure including state and
local representatives;
Education and outreach to stakeholders;
Identify potential users;
PHASE II
Assessment of infrastructure that
can be shared to help build out
this network
Illinois FirstNet
Website
www.firstnet.illinois.gov
2013 – Education / Research
Presentations
2014 – Formal Outreach
2014 Regional Workshops
Meet with State and Federal Agencies
Meet with Associations
Meet with individual Stakeholders
Host an Illinois FirstNet Statewide Conference
Finish Line?
Continue to invest in traditional communication technologies (LMR is here to stay)
There is no “finish line” – as communications continue to evolve, we must continue to select and implement those technologies that will improve our ability to effectively communicate with each other.
How will FirstNet benefit
public safety?
Improved situational awareness
Save time when seconds count
Save money
Save lives, solve crimes, and keep
our communities and first responders
safer
Why be involved today? At this stage we have options
By providing input, we can have influence
on what that network is going to look like
Why be involved today? At this stage we have options
By providing input, we can have influence
on what that network is going to look like
Who can you contact?
Joe Galvin (SWIC)
O 847.214.5252
C 312.833.1823
www.firstnet.illinois.gov
Radio Interoperability Training
Radio use
ITTF STARCOM21 Radio Use
Bring it all together
I2FOG
Illinois
Interoperable Field
Operations Guide
(I2FOG)
Start with Table of
Contents
Available Online at
IEMA Web Site
New Template - Page 5
STARCOM21 Rules of Use
Page 9
When to use STARCOM21
What Channels you are
What to do if you need additional
channel resources
Non - STARCOM21 Rules of Use
Page 10
State Level Interop Channels
National Interop Channels
Maps Page
11-20
IEMA
IDOT
ISP
ITECS/UCP Locations
ITECS Channel Assignments
General Comms unit Information
Pages 26-35
ICS Form Descriptions
Incident Prioritization
Channels
35 - 54
State Level
NIP
VCALL/VTAC
UCALL/UTAC
700 MHz
800 MHz
Load these into your Subscriber
radios today
RACES/ARES
Pages 55-56
Information
State Deployable
Pages 57-85
Interop Repeaters
Gateways
Caches
Mobile Comms Centers
UCP
ITECS
SOW
Generators
Helpful Information
Pages 86-85
Points of Contact
Helpful information
NAQ/PL
Phonetic Alphabet
Now we are out of the
communications fog and
into the I2FOG…
Comm Unit COML (240 trained)
3 Sessions in 2014 (N, C, S,)
Posted on the IEMA Web Page
COMT (30 trained) No session Identified today
AuxComm (60 Trained) class in May
Task Books Submit them to me
Update Before we begin Knowledge Base STARCOM21 FAQS – Interactive and downloadable
SC21 State Interop Templates
SC21 Quick Start Guides – link to ILEAS site
SC21 SOP Template
I2FOG
SCIP
TICP
https://iema.illinois.gov/iema/SCIP.asp