|
November 13,
2007
Introduction to the 700 MHz
Statement of Requirements
(SoR)
The
Broadband Working Group of the National Public Safety
Telecommunications Council (NPSTC) has compiled the
attached document to assist with the development of a
nationwide interoperable broadband network for public
safety agencies. This work was undertaken following the
decision of the Federal Communications Commission (FCC)
to establish a Public Safety Broadband Licensee (PSBL),
and reflects the outcome of a first opportunity to
solicit and develop public safety broadband
requirements. The PSBL will be responsible for
administering the 700 MHz public safety broadband
segment. It will join with the D Block licensee to forge
a public-private partnership to deploy and maintain the
network, initially by negotiating a Network Sharing
Agreement that must ultimately be approved by the FCC.
The document was prepared for the many interests
involved: the yet to be named PSBL, prospective D Block
auction bidders, public safety agencies, equipment and
infrastructure manufacturers and service providers, and
the FCC. The law places ultimate responsibility with the
FCC for how this spectrum is used. It is intended to
communicate the network functions and characteristics
the public safety community finds necessary for a
network that public safety agencies will participate in
and rely upon.
The effort commenced with the
underlying premise that the innovation accompanying
modern communications must embrace the standards
associated with around the clock operations and coverage
wherever a critical incident, large or small, is found.
Bringing about advanced services and a nationwide
interoperable network requires understanding that the
citizen confronting an emergency relies on first
responders and their communications capability no matter
what the circumstance. Success is measured in the speed
and quality of response. At stake is not only agency
participation, but the public's trust in their emergency
services.
The information is drawn from the
experience of individuals responsible for public safety
communications across varied agencies, geographies, and
demographics. It reflects the experience associated with
single incidents to large catastrophic events.
Designing, deploying, and maintaining systems that
continue to function throughout an emergency is the
foundation of their responsibilities.
By
enumerating core requirements, the Working Group's
effort has been directed toward delineating what public
safety has conveyed to be essential for their users. The
work recognizes the reality that implementation of
features, functions, and performance standards will be
neither immediate nor without challenge. The work
recognizes the involvement of the many interests that
must forge a cooperative alliance for each to succeed,
such as the Network Sharing Agreement to be negotiated
between the PSBL and D Block auction winner.
The Working Group sought and obtained
meaningful participation from a range of public safety
agencies, potential D Block auction bidders,
infrastructure and equipment manufacturers and service
providers, and others with experience in public safety
communications. It held multiple meetings for commercial
and public safety input, including a two-day forum in
Colorado (attendee list attached) and two days of web
meetings for public safety's final review of the draft.
It invited review and comment of a draft document from
over 256,000 public safety users and considered all of
the over 400 comments submitted. To promote a document
capable of moving a public safety broadband network used
by the range of agencies closer to reality, the Working
Group sought to bring clarity and comprehension to the
many issues.
NPSTC
is a federation of organizations whose mission is to
improve public safety communications and
interoperability through collaborative
leadership.
|