Converging Communication
February 9, 2007 Sponsored by Alcatel-Lucent
In January 2007, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) released a report providing interoperability scorecards for 75 metropolitan areas in the United States.
Subject matter expert panels reviewed documentation from city regions on current communications plans, exercises and a self-assessment to produce consensus findings and recommendations. Each region will receive its scorecard from the department, which is using them to focus its technical assistance programs. The report is the first scientific measure conducted of tactical interoperability communications in local governments.
Overall, urban/metropolitan areas have come a long way in improving their tactical interoperable communications capabilities, the report said. Still, only six city regions earned the highest score.
The report defines tactical interoperability as the rapid provision of on-scene, incident based, mission-critical voice communications among all first responder agencies-- including emergency medical services, fire and law enforcement as appropriate for the incident. Tactical reliability depends on a converged network to enable tactical interoperability.
Converged networking solutions from Alcatel-Lucent equip first responders, emergency managers and others to truly collaborate using voice, video, photographs and data. Alcatel-Lucent delivers advanced IP-based, voice, data and video services through a single network backbone. These flexible, standards-based solutions are manageable, secure and cost-effective--and they offer the reliability of an "always on" utility.
Government agencies need reliable high-quality voice solutions. Video is becoming an essential tool for government through applications such as video conferencing and video surveillance. And network administrators demand versatile consolidated networks that allow data, voice and video to share a single, efficient infrastructure.
Alcatel-Lucent's converged network model has the sophistication to deliver vital information securely and reliably, regardless of format. It also has the intelligence to give urgent and important messages priority over mundane network traffic. And the solution's standards-based design allows it to link to other networks in nearby jurisdictions, supporting regional emergency response efforts.
Speeding Response
Truly interoperable communication systems eliminate the information delay that plagues emergency response during many natural and manmade disasters. First responders find themselves en route to rescue sites, waiting for facts and instructions from dispatch centers. Alcatel-Lucent's IP-based solutions work with mobile radios to connect responders directly to the agencies producing the necessary data. The technology accelerates decision-making and empowers responders to devise more informed tactics.
These solutions deliver true interoperability, so firefighters communicate with police, medical staff and other vital first responders using their own communications devices without waiting for the information they need to travel through back channels first.
Governments implementing Alcatel-Lucent solutions use a variety of teleconferencing services hosted on one integrated system. Office staff can instantly set up conference bridges to connect remote locations and launch four types of interactions: voice interaction, video interaction, data instant messaging and application sharing. An automated messaging feature can automatically dial participants based on a call list. For example, operators of public safety networks could use the technology as a reverse 911 notification system to alert citizens to impending circumstances or the need to evacuate.
Expanding with Government's Needs
Alcatel-Lucent understands that most governments can't make drastic infrastructure changes to gain these new capabilities. Therefore, the company designs solutions that work with existing network technology. Alcatel-Lucent also delivers networks that are flexible and can route extra bandwidth where it is needed on a moment's notice.
Continual additions of network elements and redesigns of network infrastructures involve budgets that don't exist in most local government agencies. Equally important, agencies can't afford the shutdowns of critical services that type of alteration requires. Alcatel Lucent's network solutions allow agencies to expand their communications abilities while keeping normal services in operation.
Alcatel-Lucent solutions are scalable because any agency that can't quickly plan for and respond to future growth faces dire troubles. They also incorporate capabilities that help agencies include rural, bandwidth-starved regions into cutting-