Title: Project Kickoff Presentation
1Sussex County, New JerseyPhase I PSAP
Consolidation Feasibility StudyReport Findings
June 29, 2007
2Todays Agenda
- Corporate Overview
- Project Goals/Scope
- Current Environment
- Alternatives Analyzed
- Call Volumes
- Staffing Analysis
- Budgetary Costs
- Advantages Disadvantages
- Recommendations
- Questions Discussion
3RCC AttendeesPublic Safety Information Systems
- Mr. Michael Weins, P.M.P., Director
- Mr. Clint Hugghins, P.E., Senior Project Engineer
4Corporate Overview
- Established in 1983
- National International Presence
- Headquarters in Woodbridge, NJ
- Offices Nationwide
- 125 Full-Time Staff
- Focused on Communications and Information
Technology - Wireless and Wireline Voice and Data
Communications Systems - Public Safety Information Technology
- Serving Private Public Sector Critical Services
Industries - Business Planning and Analysis
- Systems Consulting Engineering
- System Integration
- Communications Planning, Engineering, and
Management Software
5Selected Comm. Center Studies
- Lake County, IL
- Greater Orlando Aviation Authority, FL
- Genesee County, MI
- Caddo Parish, LA
- Henrico County, VA
- Seminole County, FL
- Prince William County ,VA
- Miami,, FL
- Cayuga County, NY (Consolidated Center)
- Lafayette Parish, LA
- Oswego County, NY (47 Agencies)
- Chesterfield County, VA
- Stafford County, VA (Co-located SO, FD EMS
- Hillsborough County Sheriffs Dispatch Center, FL
- Walt Disney World, FL
- St. Clair County, MI
- Orlando , FL
- Lakeland Police And Fire, FL
- City/County of Kalamazoo, MI
- City of Atlanta, GA
- Fairfax County, VA
- Sacramento, CA PD
- Long Beach, CA (PM for Fluor Daniel Motorola)
- Johnson County, KS (50k Sq. Ft. Consolidated
Center - Tucson, AZ (90 Position Consolidated Center)
- City of Raleigh Wake CO, NC (Remodel 22 Pos.
Center While in Operation) - Winston-Salem, NC
- Bellevue, WA
- Hialeah Public Safety, FL
6Goals of the Study
- Analyze savings by reduction of duplicative
systems and facilities and reducing inefficient
trunking or human resource pools. - Quantify improvements in quality of service.
- Interoperability
- Better performance
- Redundancy or back up
- Eliminate single point of failure
- Meet standards set by OETS
7Initial Scope of Work
- Conduct a high level feasibility study of
analyzing risks and benefits of consolidating six
Public Safety Answering Point operations into one
or more Countywide PSAPs.
8Initial Scope of Work
- Conduct a high level analysis of the following
systems and subsystems as it relates to their
viability in a consolidated communications center
environment - Radio Systems
- Computer Aided Dispatch Systems
- Records Management Systems
- Mobile Data Computer Systems
- E 9-1-1 Emergency Telephone Number Systems
- Fire Station Alerting Systems
- Non-Emergency, Administrative Telephone Systems
9Initial Scope of Work
- Factors evaluated
- Call Volumes existing and future growth.
- Wireless call volumes, and their potential impact
on operations - Personnel requirements associated with current
and future call volumes - Technology existing, current upgrading and
future requirements economies of scale - Non-dispatch duties performed, their costs, the
alternatives
10Statewide PSAPs
11Current Environment
- 6 PSAPs located throughout County
- Service to 24 towns and municipalities
- Staffing varies from 1-3 call taker/dispatch
positions (depending on facility and time of day) - All agencies use Enforsys (Munipol) and InfoCop
for CAD/RMS and MDC
12Current Environment
13Data Collection Process
- Site Visits (physical facilities and systems)
- Interviews and Focus Groups
- Data Collection Surveys
- Call Volume Analysis based on calls for service
and projected growth (using Erlang-C, Grade of
Service .01 for 9-1-1 calls, .15 for Admin calls)
14Alternatives Analyzed
- Baseline (No Change to Current Configuration)
- Fully Consolidated PSAP (Single Facility)
- Partially Consolidated PSAP
- Two PSAPs (Single Fire/EMS Dispatch)
15Baseline Configuration
16Consolidated PSAP
17Partially Consolidated PSAP
18Two PSAPs, Single Fire/EMS Dispatch
19Staffing Considerations
20Staffing Considerations
- Total Hrs/Year 8760 (365x24)
- Total Hrs/Employee 2080 (40x52)
- Avg. Hrs/Employee 1765 (previous slide)
- Employees/Position 4.9 (8760/1765)
- 8-hour shift FTE multiplier 1.654
- (365 days/yr x 8 hr/day / 1765 hr/yr 1.654)
21Call Volumes
1 Sparta reported 175,000 Admin Calls in 2005 (20
calls every hour). This call volume was excessive
compared to other PSAPs. After failed attempts
to confirm this number, RCC projected Admin Call
quantity for Sparta based on the other PSAPs
ratio of 9-1-1 calls to Admin Calls.
22Dispatch Type
23Call Distribution
24Current Staffing
1 Two telecommunicators during 1st and 2nd
shift, one telecommunicator during 3rd shift. 2
Two telecommunicators during 1st and 2nd shift,
one telecommunicator during 3rd shift.
25Single PSAP Staffing(2006)
26Single PSAP Staffing(2017)
27Partially Consolidated PSAP Staffing(2006)
28Partially Consolidated PSAP Staffing(2017)
29Two PSAP Staffing(2006)
30Two PSAP Staffing(2017)
31Assumptions
- 2005 call volumes escalated 5 per year
- Busy hour calls are 400 of average call volumes
(staff to handle busy hour) - 2nd shift has busy hour, 1st shift staffed for
85 of busy hour calls, 3rd shift staffed for 35
of busy hour calls - 9-1-1 calls answered within 1 second (grade of
service - P.01) - Average 9-1-1 call duration 2 minutes
- Admin calls answered within 1 second (grade of
service P.15) - Average admin call duration 30 seconds (most
calls transferred)
32Physical Facilities
- Space and Budgetary Considerations for
- Communications Center
- Break Rooms
- Conference Rooms
- Copy/File Room
- Equipment Room
- Equip. Maintenance Room
- Lockers/Showers
- Training Room
- Office Space
33Physical Facilities
34Baseline Staffing Costs
35Staffing Cost Comparison(Single Consolidated
PSAP)
Total telecommunicator personnel are decreased by
22 percent (11 people) in the Fully Consolidated
alternative as compared to the baseline
configuration. The resulting decrease in
telecommunicator staff payroll will be
approximately 695,132 annually.
36Staffing Cost Comparison(Partially Consolidated
PSAP)
Total telecommunicator personnel are increased by
2.0 percent (1 person) in the Partially
Consolidated alternative as compared to the
baseline configuration. The resulting increase
in telecommunicator staff payroll will be
approximately 348,078 annually.
37Staffing Cost Comparison(Two PSAPs)
Total telecommunicator personnel are increased by
60.0 percent (30 people) in the Two-PSAP
alternative as compared to the baseline
configuration. The resulting increase in
telecommunicator staff payroll will be
approximately 2,651,162 annually.
38Budgetary Comparisons
39Baseline Considerations
- Advantages
- PSAPs are geographically dispersed. In the event
of a PSAP system failure or evacuation, other
PSAPs in the County can backup call
taking/dispatch operations. - PSAP police departments are staffed 24/7
providing continuous agency access to the public. - Current staffing/equipment costs (as reported by
the existing PSAPs) are less than any of the
alternatives considered by this report.
40Baseline Considerations
- Disadvantages
- PSAPs are frequently under-staffed. In some
cases, PSAPs only have a single telecommunicator
on duty. This creates incidents where the single
telecommunicator is overwhelmed by call/dispatch
activity. - When 9-1-1 calls go unanswered, they roll over
to a neighboring PSAP within the County. These
calls are then transferred back to the proper
PSAP because the neighboring PSAP cannot dispatch
units for the required agency. This results in
excessive response times to incidents and long
hold times for 9-1-1 callers. - PSAP service is frequently disrupted by changes
in PSAP contracts (i.e., cities changing dispatch
contracts with PSAPs). - Some PSAPs have outgrown their current facility
(and radio equipment) and need to upgrade.
41Single Consolidated PSAP
- Advantages
- Staffing efficiencies are realized by sharing the
entire Countys call taking and dispatch
functions by one group of telecommunicators. - Improved public safety dispatch services provided
to the citizens of Sussex County.
Telecommunicators are similarly trained to
provide consistent service to the public and
public safety response unit personnel. - Improved multi-agency response coordination.
42Single Consolidated PSAP
- Disadvantages
- Systems and facilities would have to be
modified/constructed to support the change to a
single PSAP. - Several agencies have recently invested in new
PSAP facilities. These agencies are opposed to
consolidation. - Acceptable telecommunicator salaries and benefits
would have to be negotiated/implemented. - Common dispatch policies would have to be
developed and implemented.
43Partially Consolidated PSAP
- Advantages
- Staffing efficiencies are realized by sharing the
entire Countys call taking function by one group
of telecommunicators. - Improved multi-agency response coordination.
44Partially Consolidated PSAP
- Disadvantages
- Systems and facilities would have to be
modified/constructed to support the change to a
single PSAP. - Several agencies have recently invested in new
PSAP facilities. These agencies are opposed to
consolidation. - Acceptable telecommunicator salaries and benefits
would have to be negotiated/implemented. - This alternative may result in a more complex
management arrangement (different dispatch
policies for PD and FD/EMS). - Dispatch system differences would complicate
cross-training for all telecommunicator positions.
45Two PSAPs
- Advantages
- PSAPs are geographically dispersed. In the event
of a PSAP system failure or evacuation, other
PSAP in the County can backup call
taking/dispatch operations. - Improved multi-agency response coordination.
46Two PSAPs
- Disadvantages
- Systems and facilities would have to be
modified/constructed to support the change to new
PSAPs. - Several agencies have recently invested in new
PSAP facilities. These agencies are opposed to
consolidation. - Acceptable telecommunicator salaries and benefits
would have to be negotiated/implemented. - This alternative may result in a more complex
management arrangement (different dispatch
policies for PD and FD/EMS). - Dispatch system differences would complicate
cross-training for all telecommunicator positions - Common dispatch policies would have to be
developed and implemented.
47Recommendation
- Consolidation to a single PSAP will ultimately
achieve the greatest efficiency and cost savings
48Consolidation Benefits
- Minimized 9-1-1 call transfers
- Overall operational cost savings for public
safety communication by greater economies of
scale. - Improved performance inherent in a larger, more
fully dedicated staff pool. - Improved interoperability among agencies in
mutual aid situations or major incidents - More rapid and efficient migration to new
technologies made more affordable by economies of
scale. - Service growth - a consolidated communications
center will better accommodate growth in required
public safety calls for service
49Other Considerations
- Improved Service - Consolidated call centers are
likely to have more qualified, trained staff on
duty and to provide more training opportunities
for staff. (Rutgers University Consolidation
Report) - Legislative Changes - The State plan shall
require the consolidation of PSAPs (Public Law
2007, Chapter 56) - Technology Changes Introduction of NG 9-1-1
Technology will eventually replace the present
E9-1-1 system, and consolidation will be
financially advantageous (est. 200K per PSAP)
50Questions?
51Propagation Analysis
- Objective Coverage analysis for dispatch radio
systems (VHF Low, VHF High, UHF) - Output Computer model of predicted aggregate
coverage and associated analysis - Process
- On-site survey of selected sites and systems
- FCC database frequency search for license
information - Propagation modeling
52Propagation Analysis
- Assumptions
- Maps reflect a liberal set of requirements
(minimal acceptable results with maximum
coverage) including Delivered Audio Quality (DAQ)
of 3.0 with 90 reliability (Design goals would
include DAQ of 3.4 with 95 reliability) - Maps reflect talk-out to mobile/portable units.
System should be balanced for both talk-out
and talk-in - Maps reflect Effective Radiated Power (ERP) per
FCC database or power/gain of antenna if known - Maps reflect actual antenna heights or height
from FCC database
53Propagation Analysis
- Results
- Individual and Composite maps prepared for each
PSAP and each applicable band - Maps indicate propagation throughout County could
be achieved on Low Band Mobile - 90 of County covered by Low Band Pager
- Significant shadowing in North-West ridge of
County on composite VHF High Band due to ridge
line - Some shadowing on all corners of County on
Sheriff High Band
54Propagation Analysis
- Results
- Results are depicted in several signal strength
categories to demonstrate coverage in varying
conditions (outdoor/indoor with varying
noise/attenuation) - Several sites require license updates to correct
errors or reflect new location information - No single site produces reliable coverage to the
entire region and simultaneous transmission
(Simulcast) from multiple sites would require
extensive and costly technical enhancements to
the present installations. - Model predicts the large area coverage only for
mobile operation. Communication to personal pager
units is significantly less pervasive - Diverse nature of the geographical area of Sussex
County creates issues in propagation