Title: Improving Public Safety Interoperability OMG
1Improving Public Safety InteroperabilityOMG
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- Thursday, June 26th, 2008
2- "The single most important issue facing homeland
security today is interoperability." - Dr. David Boyd
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- Speech to Ninth Annual Technologies for Critical
Incident Preparedness Conference and Exposition,
November 7, 2007
3Agenda
- Centre for Security Science and Canadian Police
Research Centre who are we? - Interoperability Background
- Case Studies 1, 2 3
- Visual Analytics Common Operating Picture
- The World is Flat - Standards
- Next Steps
- QA
4Centre for Security Science
- Defense Research and Development Canada and
Public Safety Canada joined forces to develop
Centre for Security Science (CSS) -
www.css.drdc-rddc.gc.ca - Canadian Police Research Centre (CPRC) now part
of CSS www.cprc.org - Powerful new opportunities to join forces and
leverage each others strengths - Canadian Interoperability Technology Interest
Group in Partnership with Public Safety
Associations (CACP, CAFC, EMSCC) in Canada
5Call to Action!
- Several successful meetings held (Toronto, St.
Johns, Calgary, Edmonton, Vancouver and
Saskatoon October 16th in Moncton NB for
Maritime Forum) - Hugely successful Canadian Voice Interoperability
Workshop, March 26th to 28th, Ottawa with over
170 experts from across Canada, the USA and
International - Support and recognition in the U.S. (LEIM
presentations, NPSTC, etc.)
6CITIG Research Proposals
- Call for proposals ran through September to
October 31 - 21 proposals received
- The total value of projects 2,682,473 with total
value of funds requested 1,634,583 - Range of value requested 10,000 to 500,000
- In total, 325,000 in funding provided for
interoperability projects - All projects now completed and submitted.
7The Next Round of Proposals
- Working to improve the process (the feedback
received was very helpful) - It will remain a competitive process
- Working to make it as painless as possible while
still respecting the needs of Federal procurement
rules - Targeting start of fiscal Q3
- Look for information by mid-summer
8Working with our US Partners
- Ongoing efforts with DHS CCI, ST, OIC, OEC,
NVAC, NIJ, NPSTC, NIST - Various presentations to National Workshop
- CITIG presentations to DHS University Summit,
NVAC, NIJ, etc. - RCMP (IBET) working with US counterparts on pilot
projects - Seeking other joint projects
9Case Study 1Daily Interoperability
102004 Presidential Visit
11The Challenge
- 14 days to develop an operational plan including
a unified radio communications plan - 2,000 multi-jurisdictional police officers
- 700 Public Order members from four agencies
- Over 12 different federal, provincial and local
jurisdictions with two provinces hosting events - Limited number of patched radio channels
available - Parliament Buildings, conference centre and
various embassies increase security concerns - No common visualization tools available
- Multiple data sources available
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14Case Study 2 Alexandria Bridge
- Snake march approached low priority post
- All Public Order teams engaged / transportation
routes clogged - Only major support team available Quebec
Provincial Police Public Order team - ready room
at other end of bridge - Command Control requirement to seek approval
prior to using these resources - Process manual but timely
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16Case Study 3(Police Information Portal)
- Commenced over drinks at a Christmas party
- Just do it! Attitude by key police leaders
- Originally linked RMS between limited agencies
in Ontario / BC - Transferred to become part of National Police
Services/RCMP - Now National System with 98 sign on
- No analytical tools attached yet
17The World is Flat(Thomas Friedman)
- Standards (P25, TETRA, TETRA-POL, MESA)
- Convergence
- VoIP / RoIP (voice IS DATA!)
- Software Defined Radio (SDR)
- Cognitive Radio (CR)
- We define what you define how
18Visual AnalyticsSupporting Incident Command (1)
- Combine various of sources of data into one
visual representation that I/C can use to better
understand theatre of operations - Vastly improve situational awareness for all
levels of Command structure - Provide Commanders from various public safety
agencies (police, fire, EMS, EM) access (when
authorized) to real-time information
19Visual AnalyticsSupporting Incident Command (2)
- New technologies could dramatically improve and
reduce need for co-location of CC resources - Ability to visualize voice transmissions in real
time may have improved ability to assess
situation faster and make more informed
deployment decisions - Push Common Operating Picture from UCC to Field
Commanders Wireless Device - Requires standards for sharing EM data
20Next Steps for CITIG
- Ongoing Regional Forums (Moncton October 16th)
- Vendor Outreach Forum showcase in Toronto October
8th 9th - Second National Voice Interoperability Workshop
November December 7 10th in Toronto - February 15-18, 2009 Victoria, BC CACP
Informatics Committee Conference
21 22Inspector Lance Valcour Ottawa Police Service On
secondment to Canadian Police Research
Centre Program Manager Canadian Interoperability
Technology Interest Group Lance.Valcour_at_cprc.org w
ww.cprc.org/citig 613-993-2842