Swenson says LA-RICS providing FirstNet with valuable lessons about outreach, infrastructure sharing
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Swenson says LA-RICS providing FirstNet with valuable lessons about outreach, infrastructure sharing
As the saga surrounding the Los Angeles Regional Interoperable Communications System (LA-RICS) public-safety LTE deployment unfolds, FirstNet officials are learning a great deal about the importance of outreach and limitations associated with infrastructure sharing, according to FirstNet Chairwoman Sue Swenson.
A key component of the LA-RICS deployment plan has been to leverage existing government-owned property—for example, city and county fire stations—to locate LTE cell sites. With this approach, LA-RICS was allowed to skip some of the time-consuming state environmental regulation procedures, which was the only way to complete the system by the Sept. 30 deadline attached to the $154.6 million in federal grants being used to pay for most of the project.
But deploying the sites has not proceeded as planned. Objections raised by local residents and public-safety unions resulted in suburban jurisdictions refusing to let LA-RICS build on their property, which was followed by elected officials for Los Angeles County and the city of Los Angeles voting to halt construction in their jurisdictions. Of the original 232 sites planned for the LTE system, “about 50” remain available today, LA-RICS Executive Director Pat Mallon said.
Last week, the National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA) suspended construction on the project.
This episode has FirstNet officials rethinking the practicality of utilizing assets owned by local or state governments that can experience significant policy shifts in a relatively short period of time, according to Swenson.
“The rules change, the leadership changes, opinions change,” Swenson said during an interview with IWCE’s Urgent Communications.
Swenson mentioned the difficulties associated with leveraging government assets as a primary source of infrastructure for the proposed public-safety broadband network while testifying before Congress last month. The evolution of the LA-RICS since that time has only reinforced the concern.
“In the legislation [creating FirstNet], it calls for using existing infrastructure to deploy the network,” Swenson said. “That sounds great in concept, but to be able to actually negotiate all of the different agreements—and every state has different rules about their assets—would take months and years. We’d be dead before the network was deployed.
“That was a huge lesson learned.”
However, Swenson quickly noted that she believes government-owned assets still can play a valuable role to help FirstNet deploy the network in areas where none of the selected partners have existing infrastructure that would support coverage.
“That doesn’t mean we won’t do it [utilize government-owned assets],” Swenson said. “But what will happen is that, once the awards—or award, depending on how many partners we have—are given, then we will look at the existing infrastructure with the partners to say, ‘What does the existing footprint look like, and what can we augment?’
“Then, it [utilizing government-owned assets] becomes an augmentation strategy, not a primary strategy, as I look at it.”
Outreach is the first thing
Outreach is the first thing you do when developing a regional system. It’s also the second, third, fourth, and etc. Actually, it’s a continuous requirement all the way through the process. Surprised that the FirstNet project team was not aware of this!!!!