Orange County NC Website
<br />Interoperability for the Durham, NC MSA <br />Project Description <br />A. Problem Identification and Tustification and Use of Federal Funds <br />The Durham, NC MSA consists of Durham, Person, Orange, and Chatham counties. This includes <br />the cities and towns of Roxboro, Hillsborough, Chapel Hili, Durham, Pittsboro, and Siler City. The <br />population of the Durham MSA is 451,212 (U S Census 2004 estimate). <br />Public Safety communications in the Durham MSA is difficult due to the incompatibility of the <br />radio systems operated by the many agencies. The incompatibility of radio systems within the Durham <br />MSA results in the inability of law enforcement officers to readily share perthrent information when they <br />must interface with officers from a different jurisdiction, such as during pursuits, missing persons, and <br />potential terrorism incidents. <br />Durham County: <br />Durham has excellent interoperability with agencies in the Raleigh MSA due to the compatibi]ity <br />of 800 MHz trunked radio systems. While most agencies in Durham County have nugrated to an 800 <br />MHz tmrrked system installed in 1994, the Durham County Sheriff s Department continues to operate <br />on a conventional UFIF system. This creates interoperability issues and diminishes First Responder <br />effectiveness within Durham County. Limited funding has prevented moving this large organization to <br />800 MHz. This grant will provide interoperability that currently does not exist, between the Durham <br />County Sheriffls Department and other law enforcement, fire and EMS agencies in the Durham MSA, <br />adjacent MSAs and statewide. <br />Orange County: <br />Orange County L^mergency Management is the primary Public Safety Answering Point (PSAP) <br />and dispatch center for the County serving a growing population of 118,227 (2000 U.S Census). The <br />County PSAP dispatches for the municipalities of Hillsborough, Chapel Hill, and Canboro, providing <br />citizens contact with the following services: 11 fire departments, four law enforcement agencies, <br />emergency medical services, and animal conhol The PSAP also dispatches for emergency medical <br />services and fire services to the University of North Caro]ina at Chapel Hill and the University of <br />North Carolina at Chapel Hill FIospital. The need for interoperable communications is extremely high <br />for this area due to the diverse responsibilities of the PSAP and the nahue of the community. Also, the <br />University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill contains at least one homeland security sensitive target <br />that falls within the Buffer Zone Protection Program, An attack on this target would create a huge need <br />for communications interoperability due to the potentially large human casualty impact if such an <br />attack were ever realized. <br />The current Orange County radio system utilizes discrete VI-IF and UHF frequencies, which linuts <br />interoperability between public safety agencies, To begin to remedy this interoperability problem, the <br />county has requested and received funding from the 2004 Law Enforcement Terrorism Prevention <br />Program to pay for two 800 MHz tower sites for the county on the State's Voice interoperability Plan <br />for Emergency Responders (VIPER), The VIPER network is a statewide system that local emergency <br />response agencies may participate in which is based on an 800 MHz trunked radio system. Orange <br />County's current problem is that, while the PSAP has legal access to the system, the dispatch center <br />cannot presently dispatch on the 800 MHz band due to the existing consoles. Tlris is impeding efforts <br />to bring local law enforcement and emergency services agencies onto the 800 MHz VIPER platform to <br />allow them to conununicate with one another. Unless the dispatch center's equipment is upgraded, <br />