1 / 15

NASTD 34 TH ANNUAL CONFERENCE

NASTD 34 TH ANNUAL CONFERENCE. Communications and Technology Omaha, Nebraska August 30, 2011. James Arden Barnett Jr., Rear Admiral (Ret.) Chief, Public Safety and Homeland Security Bureau Federal Communications Commission. Agenda. PSHSB Overview Public Safety Broadband Network

vincel
Download Presentation

NASTD 34 TH ANNUAL CONFERENCE

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. NASTD 34TH ANNUAL CONFERENCE Communications and TechnologyOmaha, NebraskaAugust 30, 2011 James Arden Barnett Jr., Rear Admiral (Ret.) Chief, Public Safety and Homeland Security Bureau Federal Communications Commission

  2. Agenda • PSHSB Overview • Public Safety Broadband Network • Narrowbanding Deadline • Next Generation 9-1-1 • Cybersecurity • Emergency Alerting

  3. PSHSB Overview • Public Safety and Homeland Security Bureau Est. in 2006 • Primary Mission Essential Function “Ensure the continuous operation and reconstitution of critical communications system and services.” • Strategic Goal "Communications during emergencies and crisis must be available for public safety, health, defense, and emergency personnel, as well as all consumers in need. The Nation's critical communications infrastructure must be reliable, interoperable, redundant, and rapidly restorable."

  4. Public Safety Broadband Network • Created in April 2010 with the mission of establishing a technical and operational framework that will ensure nationwide operability and interoperability in the deployment and operation of the 700 MHz public safety nationwide broadband wireless network.

  5. Public Safety Broadband Network Actions May 2010 • Waiver Order granting approval of 21 petitions December 2010 • Interoperability Framework Order for waiver recipients January 2011 • Interoperability Third Report and Order and Fourth Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (Order and FNPRM) July 2011 • Interoperability Fourth Report and Order

  6. ERIC Public Safety Advisory Committee The PSAC is responsible for assisting ERIC with recommending solutions to the following policy objectives: • the adoption of technical and operational requirements and procedures to ensure a nationwide level of interoperability; • the adoption and implementation of requirements and procedures to address operability, roaming, priority access, gateway functions and interfaces, the interconnectivity of public safety broadband networks and other matters related to the functioning of the nationwide public safety broadband network; • the adoption of authentication and encryption requirements for common public safety broadband applications and network use; • the coordination of ERIC’s policies with other entities, including other federal agencies; • and such other policies for which ERIC may have responsibilities from time to time.

  7. Narrowbanding Deadline All Public Safety and Industrial/Business licensees in the 150-174 MHz (VHF) and 421-512 MHz (UHF) bands must complete narrowbanding to 12.5 kHz by January 1, 2013 FCC will also no longer allow manufacture or importation of equipment that includes a 25 kHz mode FCC will not certify new equipment that includes a 25 KHz mode Statewide Interoperability Coordinators (SWICs) Individuals who serve as a single point of contact to help develop interoperable communications within a state 44 of 56 states/territories currently have full-time SWICs or an equivalent position Information on SWICs can be found at the DHS website at www.dhs.gov/files/programs/gc_1286986920144.shtm

  8. Next Generation 9-1-1 Legacy 9-1-1 Limitations • Circuit-switched networks aging, capacity-constrained • Limited PSAP interconnection and back-up routing capability • Voice-centric (interconnected only) Greater Resiliency and Reliability • Circuit-switched networks aging, capacity-constrained • IP-based networks are more flexible and redundant • More options for routing traffic and handling congestion Support Newer Technologies • Existing telephone-based 9-1-1 and emerging voice services (interconnected and non-interconnected) • Video, text, and data • Applications for people with disabilities and non-English speakers Cost Effectiveness (Long Run) • Can leverage available broadband technologies • Enables increased efficiency in PSAP operations

  9. 9-1-1 and NG911 Actions September 2010 • 9-1-1 Location Accuracy Order • 9-1-1 Location Accuracy Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking and Notice of Inquiry December 2010 • NG9-1-1 Notice of Inquiry July 2011 • 9-1-1 Location Accuracy Report & Order and Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking

  10. NG9-1-1 Five-Step Plan • Identify a cost-efficient way to fund NG9-1-1 • Develop a NG9-1-1 governance framework • Implement NG9-1-1 technical standards that define system architecture • Develop location accuracy mechanisms for NG9-1-1 • Consider a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking accelerating NG9-1-1 adoption

  11. THE CYBER ENVIRONMENT NEVER STOPS… ACCELERATING | EVOLVING | EXPANDING MARCH 2011: Over 2 billion Internet users 1995 2011 Global Internet Growth

  12. Advancing Cybersecurity • Extending current outage reporting requirements to broadband ISPs and interconnected VoIP providers. • Reliability, resiliency, and continuity of communications networks including broadband technology. • Expand international participation and outreach on cyber issues.

  13. Communications Security, Reliability, and Interoperability Council CSRIC is responsible for providing recommendations regarding best practices and actions including: • Developing and recommending best practices and actions the FCC can take that promote reliable 9-1-1, E9-1-1, and NG9-1-1 service. • Determining and making recommendations on whether and how NG9-1-1 can be extended to other 9-1-1 services to ensure their reliability and cost-effective deployment. • Identifying and recommending to the FCC a set of best practices to make communications networks, including broadband networks and VoIP systems, more secure, resilient, and defendable from Internet-based attacks. • Developing recommendations for actions to promote the development of a broadband-based, NG alerting system that leverages advanced technologies and the Internet, including social media platforms, to distribute emergency alerts and warnings to the public. • Making recommendations with respect to such additional topics as the FCC may specify.

  14. Emergency Alerting • Emergency Alert System • Federal Communications Commission • Federal Emergency Management Agency • National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Nation Weather Service • National Emergency Alert System Test • November 9, 2011 at 2:00 pm EST • Commercial Mobile Alert System (CMAS) or Personalized Localized Alerting Network (PLAN) • Expected launch in April 2012 • Early launch in New York City in December 2011.

  15. Thank You! Questions? James Arden Barnett Jr. Rear Admiral (Ret.) (202) 418-1300 Jamie.Barnett@fcc.gov

More Related