Government Technology

Emergency Responders Need Equipment Compatibility, DHS Official Says



March 9, 2009 By

The question from the 1984 Ghostbusters film -- "Who ya gonna call?" -- is a loaded one around here. One of my jobs as the director of the Command, Control and Interoperability Division at the U.S. Department of Homeland Security's Directorate for Science and Technology is to ensure that our heroes -- emergency responders -- can talk to one another. The buzzword is interoperability. I hear it daily, and there's no question it's critically important.

There's also no doubt in my mind that interoperable technologies already exist. Of course, we can spend years making them better, faster and more powerful than ever before, but here's the reality: We can buy technology that meets most of our needs now, while we continue to work on making the better stuff available. However, before we can begin implementing the technology, we must face a bigger issue: cultural differences.

 

The Human Factor

Some emergency response agencies remain rooted in turf battles that make collaboration nearly impossible, while other agencies simply don't consider collaboration in their planning. Without collaboration, interoperability can't occur. Command structures, procedures, protocols and shared agreements must be established among regional agencies for responders to provide swift, coordinated support during incidents.

As we know all too well, a lack of communications interoperability has plagued the emergency response community for decades. After the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing, many responder agencies told the government that they couldn't communicate with responders from other agencies. This problem came to light once again following 9/11. In the following months, unions representing New York firefighters cited inadequacies in the emergency radio communications network as a major contributing factor in the death of more than 100 firefighters. Having failed to find a way to communicate with his on-site commander, a firefighter trapped in one of the towers was forced to call home and beg his wife to phone his firehouse and communicate his location to incident command. The scale of the 9/11 attacks raised the issue of communications interoperability to a national level not seen before. In these incidents, equipment incompatibility was only part of the problem. Far bigger issues were of a more human nature.


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