CTIA: Experts call for homeland security, wireless industry cooperation
Progress has been made since the 9/11 attacks, however
Computerworld - NEW ORLEANS -- To bolster the value of wireless voice and data communications for U.S. homeland security purposes, industry and government officials need to work closer together, security experts at CTIA Wireless 2005 said this week.
The consensus among five experts who took part in a panel discussion was that wireless technologies have improved since the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. But they said much remains to be done to set up effective warning systems in the event of a terrorist or natural disaster and to improve interoperability of wireless devices for emergency responders.
The toughest issue for police, firefighters and other emergency responders may be the widespread lack of interoperability between public safety networks and devices, experts said.
"It's going to take time to solve that problem, and it's unfortunate," said Christopher Guttman-McCabe, assistant vice president for regulatory policy and homeland security at the CTIA in Washington. He moderated the panel of Federal Communications Commission and U.S. Department of Homeland Security officials on Tuesday.
As an example of such disparities, the Tennessee Valley Authority now has 38 different wireless networks, although it plans to collapse that number to 19 by using a Nextel network to replace 20 of them, said a conference attendee from the TVA who asked not to be named.
The situation is distressing for police and fire units responding to a disaster, as some personnel must carry several radios or yell through bullhorns, said Jim Dailey, director of the office of homeland security for the FCC. Different jurisdictions in the same metropolitan area have over the years adopted various wireless networks, some of them proprietary, as a way to retain control, panelists said. The problem has been around since the beginning of wireless services, and is partly political as well as technological, Dailey said.
Metropolitan regions might benefit from the development of Wi-Fi mesh hot zones to transmit information, said Ron Sege, president of Tropos Networks, which provides outdoor Wi-Fi routers in more than 125 cities nationwide.
The problem with using Wi-Fi for emergencies is that the networks operate in a radio spectrum that is unlicensed, making them vulnerable to interference, Guttman-McCabe said, although work-arounds could be developed to prevent such problems, he said.
The wireless industry responded quickly to a call for Wireless Priority Service (WPS) after the 2001 terrorist attacks, when President Bush urged private vendors to voluntarily create the service, said John Graves, program director for WPS in the National Communications System, a branch of the DHS. T-Mobile USA Inc. set up WPS



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