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Saturday, June 24, 2000
O.C. Emergency Radio Upgrade Halted for Bugs
By JACK LEONARD, Times Staff Writer
Orange County officials
have halted expansion of a new $80-million emergency radio system after a
series of failures, including one case involving a tense SWAT situation
that officers say endangered their lives.
The much-touted radio system was
designed to enhance communication between police and other emergency
agencies. But police in Irvine, the
first city to use it, say the system is riddled with problems that must be
fixed before it's expanded to other cities. Tustin is the only other city
to go online so far. Technicians from
Motorola, which is constructing the network, have spent weeks trying to
resolve the complaints, but Irvine police say the problems are far from
over. "We're tired of being the guinea
pigs," Irvine Police Sgt. Dave Mihalik said.
Irvine officers told a county committee
overseeing the project that the new radios sometimes fail to pick up calls
from dispatchers, produce delayed and garbled messages, drain batteries of
motorcycles and cannot penetrate major buildings, such as areas of the
Irvine Spectrum complex and underground parking lots. The failures, they
said, have led to some tense moments: *
In one case, a motorcycle officer trying to escape an angry crowd after a
concert at Irvine Meadows was unable to start his vehicle because the
radio had drained his battery. * A
garbled communication from an officer responding to a brawl at the Irvine
Spectrum prevented colleagues from finding her to help. Officers spent a
panicked few minutes running through the complex in a desperate attempt to
find her until she eventually was able to broadcast again over the radio,
police said. * Earlier this month,
officers say, the system delayed communications during crucial moments in
the search of an Irvine warehouse for two carjacking suspects. As a
result, officers with guns drawn didn't get a message saying that SWAT
officers inside were coming out until after they had emerged.
* In addition, county officials said
some wireless phone transmitters are interfering with radio signals from
the new emergency network, preventing communication within 100 yards of a
transmitter. County officials said there are hundreds of such wireless
phone transmitters throughout the county.
The new 800-megahertz system was
designed in the wake of the devastating 1993 Laguna Beach fires, when fire
departments were unable to effectively communicate as they fought the
blaze. But in a controversy that so far is unique to the steep-sloped
beach city, residents demanded that towers for the new system be lowered
for aesthetic reasons. Motorola now says it cannot guarantee that the
radios will work inside some buildings within the city, because lower
towers will increase the chance of blocked signals.
A Freeze Imposed and Rush
Solutions Members of the county
oversight committee fear that the problems in Irvine and Tustin will
spread to other agencies unless they are solved now.
"We're simply not going to authorize
moving forward with those cities until we . . . rectify the problems that
we're having," said Allan L. Roeder, chairman of the committee overseeing
the radio network and city manager of Costa Mesa.
Motorola has flown out a team of
technicians from Chicago and Florida in an effort to fix the system.
New radios for motorcycles are being
sent out to replace the ones currently being used unsuccessfully in Irvine
and Tustin. Meanwhile, company engineers are also trying to recreate the
problems with missed calls, garbled messages and other concerns but have
met limited success, said company spokeswoman Pat Sturmon.
Motorola officials plan to meet next
week with county officials to draw up a timetable for fixing the
difficulties. But company officials were hesitant to say how long they
think the delay will last. "Motorola
wants the officers and the county to have confidence in the radio system,"
Sturmon said. "We'd like to say that we think that it's going to proceed
very quickly because we do feel that a lot of the issues are resolvable."
Officials once estimated that the county
sheriff's and police departments would be using the system by the start of
next year. But difficulties in constructing sites to install equipment and
other problems will delay completion until at least fall 2001, Sturmon
said. Sturmon said the company, at its
own expense, has altered some of the designs to increase coverage at the
Irvine Spectrum. She acknowledged that coverage could be improved further,
but at more cost. Sturmon stressed that
the problems are not the result of fundamental flaws in the company's
technology. Once the system is up and running, she said, the new digital
technology will enable agencies throughout the county to communicate with
each other as never before. "You're
going to have glitches . . . but the system itself is extremely sound,"
she said. "It's the fine tuning, while frustrating, that is what will give
the officers what they need." Roeder
agreed but said he was troubled by the inconsistency of the system's
performance in the last three months and how long it might take to fix.
"I do not believe that there is anything
fatally flawed with the system," he said. "What concerns me is how long it
will take Motorola to accomplish [solutions] and what the risk assessment
is to officers and the public in Irvine and Tustin during that period."
Officers in Irvine have become so
frustrated with the system that some use their wireless phones to
communicate with dispatchers instead of their new radios, said Sgt.
Mihalik, who is president of the Irvine Police Officers Assn.
"They're unhappy with it, to the point
where they get angry . . . because they feel that it's unsafe," Mihalik
said. "It's disappointing. To me, the system we had was better than the
system we're currently using."
* * * Appearance
vs. Function The effectiveness of a
new emergency radio system for Laguna Beach is at risk because residents
have demanded lower towers for aesthetic reasons.
Copyright 2000
Los Angeles Times
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