Title: Six Goals for Transportation Security
1Transit Communications Spectrum Issues
Strategic Assessment of Wireless Capabilities and
Needs for the Public Transportation Industry
Stephan A. Parker Transportation Research Board
Senior Program Officer Washington, DC
APTA 2008 Bus Paratransit Conference
International Bus Roadeo
2Organization
- TCRP and the Transportation Research Board of the
National Academies - Key Results of the Survey of Wireless
Capabilities in Public Transit (TCRP Project J-6
Task 67) - Strategic Plan for Meeting Transit Industry
Wireless Communications Needs (TCRP Project C-18) - 7 Steps to Narrowbanding Compliance
31863 Charter of the National Academy of Sciences
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1916 NATIONAL RESEARCH COUNCIL
5TRB is Broadly Engaged in All Modes of
Transportation
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7Transit Cooperative Research Program
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9TCRP Report 86, Vol. 10Hazard and Security Plan
Workshop Instructor Guide (2006)
Hazard and Security Planning Tools for Rural,
Small Urban, and Community-Based Public
Transportation Operations
10TCRP Report 86, Vol. 9 / NCHRP Report 525, Vol. 9
(2006)Guidelines for Transportation Emergency
Training Exercises
11Survey Results from TCRP Project J-6 Task 67,
Strategic Assessment of Wireless Capabilities and
Needs for the Public Transit Industry
- Objective (from the RFP)
- To develop a profile of current radio-frequency
and wireless-data usage for the transit industry
and to assess future needs. - This information will be used to gauge the
transit industry's need for retaining
communications assets and reserving additional
spectrum to support growing data and operational
needs.
12Web-based Survey Mailings Responses
- Invitations were sent to APTA and CTAA members in
February, 2007, and re-sent to non-responding
Northeast agencies in August, 2007 to achieve
comparable representation among regions. - Agencies Sent Invitations 765
- Completed Submissions 272 (36 of deliveries)
13Responses by Fleet Size Category
Fleet Size Categories (Based on number of
vehicles/vessels/cars)
Large gt 500 Med-Large 100 to 499 Medium 50
to 99 Med-Small 20 to 49 Small lt 20
Median Fleet Size
Large (1,104)
Number of Agencies
Med-Large (200)
Large (31)
Small (60)
Med-Small (30)
Paratransit (22)
Medium (70)
Small (12)
Med-Large (52)
Med- Small (66)
Medium (63)
14Two-Way Radio Use (89)
Q13
By Fleet Size . . .
By Mode . . .
By Region . . .
100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0
100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0
100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0
Large Med-Large Medium Med-Small Small
Northeast South Midwest West
Paratransit All Others
More Common in Large Fleets Least
Common in Paratransit
15Bandwidth Use
Q14
Among All Two-Way Radio Bandwidth Reports. . .
DSRC (5.9 GHz band) Over 900 MHz 900 MHz 800 MHz
(806 - 869 MHz) 700 MHz band Low UHF TV Sharing
(470-512 MHz) Lowband UHF (450 - 470
MHz) Canadian Border Plan (420 430 MHz) Federal
band UHF (406 - 420 MHz) Highband VHF (150 - 174
MHz) Lowband VHF (25 - 50 MHz)
16800 MHz Re-Banding
Source 800 MHz Re-Banding and Other Spectrum
Issues Affecting Transit (Gary Pruitt, ARINC,
APTA 2006 Bus Paratransit Conference)
17Narrowbanding Examples of FCC Adopted Band Plans
Source FCC http//wireless.fcc.gov/services/plmrs
/images/vhfband.jpg http//wireless.fcc.gov/servic
es/plmrs/images/uhfband.jpg
18License Ownership
Q15
By Region . . .
of licenses
By Fleet Size . . .
of licenses
19Current Wireless Passenger Services
Q23
- Wireless services for passengers are more common
among large fleets. - Wireless internet at stations is the only service
category that is not found most commonly in large
fleets.
20Planned Wireless Services
Q23
- Wireless internet in stations and during transit
are the most commonly planned services for
passengers. - Small fleets and Paratransit-only fleets are the
least likely to be planning wireless service for
passengers.
21Strategic Plan for Meeting Transit Industry
Wireless Communications Needs (TCRP Project C-18)
- Develop a detailed summary and timeline of
proposed and pending changes in wireless
communications (e.g., land mobile radio, cellular
communications, satellite radio, WLAN, etc.) due
to legislation, regulations, rules, and
standards, including, but not limited to,
re-farming, band narrowing, and technology
standardization. - Identify sub-groups likely to be affected by
pending changes in wireless communications as
delineated on the timeline. - Delineate transit industry needs for both daily
operations and emergency communications, and
identify spectrum requirements for meeting these
needs and technology types that utilize this
spectrum. - Identify stakeholders and their roles in
addressing and meeting transit industry wireless
communications needs and adaptation to new
spectrum allocations. Stakeholders include, but
are not limited to, transit agencies, transit
industry associations, State and federal
government agencies (e.g., departments of
transportation, Federal Transit Administration,
Department of Homeland Security), industry
suppliers, and frequency coordination
organizations. There are two groups doing
frequency coordination or assignment, one for
public safety agencies and the other for private,
commercial entities. See www.LMCC.org for a list
of all Part 90 FCC Certified Frequency
Coordination Organizations.
22Strategic Plan for Meeting Transit Industry
Wireless Communications Needs (TCRP Project
C-18), cont.
- Conduct a roundtable of identified stakeholders,
AASHTO, communications consultants, users of
similar spectrum (i.e., other transportation
industries such as railroads and charter buses),
etc. Address topics including - Delineation of public transit wireless
communications and interoperability requirements
for the next 10-15 years - Means for promotion of interoperability among
emergency response partners (e.g., public safety,
other transportation industries, etc.) - Facilitation of communications equipment
procurement in response to spectrum and
technological changes, and interoperability needs - Industry-wide dispersal of information on
communications changes and assistance in adapting
to these changes, with specific address of small
agencies - Submit a draft strategic industry plan with
specific steps and associated dates for assuring
that transit industry communications needs are
continuously met throughout transitions in
wireless spectrum allocations and technologies. - Submit a revised strategic plan and PowerPoint
presentation.
237 Steps to Narrowbanding Compliance
- Verify that your company or organization has a
current and valid FCC Part 90 radio station
license. - Conduct a full inventory of all radios in your
system, including all portable, mobile,
dispatcher used, wireless data or SCADA, and on-
or off-site base or repeater radios. - Determine which models in your inventory are
capable of being reprogrammed for narrowband
operation and which models arent. - Initiate the internal business process of
budgeting for and procuring any new
narrowband-capable replacement radios as
necessary. - Develop a wideband-to-narrowband conversion plan
that reflects well-coordinated logistical and
implementation strategies needed to accommodate
the replacement and installation of any new
narrowband-capable off-site base or repeater
station radio(s) needed in advance. - Schedule and coordinate with your radio service
vendor, as soon as possible, dates and times for
the actual system conversion (or cutover), making
certain that all radio users have been advised in
advance and are aware of the process. - The final step in the narrowbanding process is to
modify your FCC radio station license to reflect
the technical change in system emissions from
wideband to narrowband and make any other changes
or updates that may be required.
Source 7 Steps to Narrowbanding Compliance
(Nick Ruark, Radio Resource Media Group, April
16, 2008) http//www.radioresourcemag.com/onlyonli
ne.cfm?OnlyOnlineID34
24Transportation Research Board Communications and
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