![]() ![]() Driving interoperability forwardįrom law enforcement to emergency medical services to fire, the requirements for interoperability are similar across all critical public safety agencies: the need for dispatch connections, plus real-time situational awareness with access to maps, data and integrated communications and information sharing that ensures every agency and first responder is in the know.įor years now Verizon has been building our products and networks to ensure robust interoperability capabilities across agencies, jurisdictions, carriers, and devices: from priority network access built to the Department of Homeland Security’s standards, to preemption services that meet international standards and the technical requirements of federal, state and local public safety bids from mutual aid roaming to our partner application ecosystem from our public safety private network core to local network control functionality for commanders on the ground in an emergency from LMR integration to our recently announced mission-critical Verizon Push-to-Talk Responder.Ĭollectively, these innovations give first responders what they need most: the situational awareness within and during emergencies to do their jobs effectively and collaborate with one another to save lives and to protect property. Verizon has decades of experience supporting public safety agencies. Today more federal, state, and local first responders rely on Verizon’s award-winning network and public safety-grade products and solutions than any other carrier. We understand from our customers and experience just how critical cross-agency communication and collaboration is during emergencies and natural disasters, which is why we support true interoperability and have spent years building out our capabilities to deliver it. In an ideal world, the modern thinking of policing is several channels of interoperability: one for basic police operations, one for command, one for tactical operations and certainly one for speaking with other government agencies that you will be coordinating a response with.” ![]() VFRAC member Chief Daniel Oates, who led the Aurora, Colorado Police Department at the time of a mass shooting at a movie theater there in 2012, stated in our recent Town Hall: “When you have 250 people responding from 15 different agencies, you might technically have interoperability but with only one radio channel you don’t have communications. While collaboration and communication among first responders has improved over the years with Land Mobile Radios (LMRs), he added, “even they haven't fixed the problems of connecting to other agencies.”īy 2012, when Hurricane Sandy hit New York and New Jersey, police and firefighters from the same government agency could communicate with each other, but not with first responders from other municipalities. “Interoperability reached its precipice on September 11 where we had a very difficult time, due to the nature of the terrorist attack, and we had the inability to provide a simple radio message and were overwhelmed,” he said. During a recent Verizon Town Hall event, former Arlington, Va., Fire Chief Ed Plaugher, a member of the Verizon First Responder Advisory Council (VFRAC), reminded us all that 9/11 was a tipping point that exposed the weaknesses of existing non-interoperable solutions. Yet despite the rapid pace of technology evolution, progress toward interoperability has been slow. The terror attacks of 9/11 as well as annual large-scale natural disasters demonstrate clearly that a lack of interoperability has contributed to loss of life. The time is now, once and for all, for an industry-led approach, leveraging advances in technology to deliver this critical functionality to all public safety agencies and the communities they serve across the nation. Government agencies have tried valiantly to solve this decades-old, life-or-death challenge. One of the most critical challenges facing first responders is interoperability: when those on the frontlines need to collaborate with one another across different government agencies during times of crisis, the simple act of sharing emergency, life-saving information is often impossible.įirst responders need true interoperability, by which we mean the ability to communicate and share data with whom they need, when they need, regardless of network, device, platform or solution. ![]()
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