NBTC/ITU Workshop on Cross-Border Frequency Coordination June 29 - 30, 2015 Bangkok, Thailand.
Frequency Coordination An AASHTO service for all Public safety.
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Transcript of Frequency Coordination An AASHTO service for all Public safety.
Frequency Coordination
An AASHTO service for all Public safety
Public Safety Radio
• First Responders (Police, Fire and EMS)
• Highway Maintenance
• Traffic Control
• Advisories
• Data
• New services (VII, DSRC, ITS)
The Role of the Coordinator
The FCC defines frequency coordination as:
“The process of obtaining a frequency that will most effectively meet the applicant’s needs while minimizing interference to licensees already operating in the band”
Many states have only ONE coordinator
AASHTO Services
• AASHTO can coordinate all Public Safety frequencies: Relieving the local coordinator’s burden Rapidly process applications leading to faster
licensing Competitive Pricing
AASHTO is the Public Safety Frequency Coordinator for the State of California
Special Committee on Wireless Technology
• Purpose Support Frequency Coordination Needs Input to FCC Rules and Regulations
• SCOWT conferences provide: Training
New Techniques and TechnologiesNew FCC Rules and Regulations
Mentoring Support
Frequency Coordination
RadioSoft’s full-time staff of RF Engineers and Coordinators
• Deliver complex radio system engineering and design solutions
Other Options
• Cellular Telephone / Nextel / Pager Only in highly populated areas Easily overloaded in an emergency Inflexible design
• Email – Blackberry Same limitations as Cellular Unsafe to operate while driving
Commercial vs. Public Safety
• Public Safety Systems cover a geographical area regardless of population
• Commercial networks allocated by population rather than area
• Systems overload / shut down in emergencies
• One-to-One not One-to-Many design• No control
New Services
• VII – Vehicle to Infrastructure Integration• DSRCS – Dedicated Short-Range
Communications Service• 75 MHz reclaimed from Federal use
1 Control Channel 2 10 MHz Public Safety only channels “Communications involving the safety of life have
access priority over all other DSRC communications.”
DSRC Issues
• State and Local Governments may have a non-exclusive license for all DSRCS frequencies based on geo-political boundaries (State, County, City)
• All other eligible applicants are issued licenses based on their proposed area of operations which may include nationwide.
DSRC Issues (2)
Command and Control
• No frequencies assigned for commands No spectrum assigned for talking to RSUs
• No frequencies assigned for reporting No assigned spectrum for the RSUs to talk
back to Central Operations
The Spectrum Conundrum
• Virtually ALL Public Safety Communications is in 4 Bands
• 700 – 869 MHz Band
• 450 – 512 MHz UHF Band
• 150 – 170 MHz VHF Band 70% of all Licensed Stations are in this Band
• 30 – 50 MHz Low Band