LA-RICS works toward September public-safety LTE deadline, opponents still claim RF-emissions danger
What is in this article?
LA-RICS works toward September public-safety LTE deadline, opponents still claim RF-emissions danger
There is a lot of work to be done, but the Los Angeles Regional Interoperable Communications System (LA-RICS) still plans to complete the deployment of its public-safety LTE system by the end of September, although the project continues to receive opposition from groups claiming dangers from radio-frequency (RF) emissions.
On May 1, LA-RICS received the necessary federal approval to restart the public-safety LTE deployment, which is the largest of the five early-builder projects that are expected to provide real-world insights for the FirstNet nationwide public-safety broadband network. As required local governments, LA-RICS has been conducting community outreach about the project, according to LA-RICS Executive Director Patrick Mallon.
“The outreach is going OK,” Mallon said during an interview with IWCE’s Urgent Communications. “There were a couple of sessions that were heavily attended by some naysayers. That created some issues for us, but we are moving forward on the vast majority of sites.
“We’ve got 14 sites completed now, we’ve got 20 under construction, and we’ve got 13 that are scheduled to start this week or early next week. In addition, we have other permits getting final review, and I think we’re going to finish close to 80 LTE sites by the end of August.”
Under the revised plan approved in the spring, LA-RICS reduced the number of LTE access sites from 231 to 80, with two new microwave sites deployed to bolster backhaul for the system. The number of access sites now has been reduced to 78, Mallon said.
“We had one city councilman ask us to pull a site out where there was significant opposition from his community,” he said. “Then, we had one of the sites where Supervisor Antonovich had identified for additional outreach, and we have a significant amount of opposition from there.”
Mallon said the opposition has been centered on concerns that the LA-RICS cell sites would generate RF emissions that could lead to cancer—a claim made by Los Angeles-area firefighters earlier this year that resulted in the original public-safety LTE deployment plan being scrapped.
“With both of those sites, we’ve had this group of individuals that want to stop any RF emissions from anything in Los Angeles, including Wi-Fi—they want to see Wi-Fi hot spots eradicated,” Mallon said. “So, they went into these two community meetings and did a bunch of fearmongering.”
“They brought in that Vice President [Joe] Biden’s son [Beau] died as a result of brain cancer that he received from cell-phone usage, that there are foreign countries prohibiting Wi-Fi from being installed in any of the schools and that they are not allowing children to use cellular phones because of the Wi-Fi. The public bought the lies.”
Beau Biden did die of brain cancer, but Mallon said he does not know of any officials reports that linked the death to cell-phone use.