The new 700 MHz radio system, Maryland First Responders Interoperable Radio System Team (Maryland FiRST), was officially announced in June and the entire network is expected to be operating within four years.
Gov. Martin O’Malley said in a video that the $48 million first phase of the network’s rollout is expected to be completed by the end of 2012 once testing and training is done.
The Maryland Transportation Authority, State Police and Kent County will be first to utilize Maryland FiRST. Upon completion, the network will support all Maryland police, firefighters, emergency medical services, emergency management personnel and first responders, according to the announcement.
“By building Maryland FiRST, we are making great progress toward this critical goal of interoperability for our public safety agencies,” O’Malley said in a statement earlier this year. “Our first responders deserve modern communications equipment to perform their jobs in the safest and most effective way possible.”
“It’s going to be a real game-changer for all the state agencies,” Lehr said.
The statewide radio system rollout comes before the FCC’s Jan. 1, 2013, deadlinefor new “narrowbanding” requirements.
The FCC is requiring all public safety and “business industrial” land mobile radio systems that are operating in the 150 to 512 MHz radio band to stop using 25 kHz channels and switch to 12.5 kHz “narrowband” channels. According to the FCC, if radio systems do not make the switch by 2013, they will be in violation of the new rules and subject to penalties.
Lehr said because the mandate was put in place years ago, states have had plenty of time to prepare for the 2013 deadline.
Photo: This radio tower located at the Maryland State Police headquarters in Pikesville was the first site to be connected to the new statewide radio network Maryland FiRST. Photo courtesy of the state of Maryland.
In Maryland, the initial phase of the network’s rollout includes central Maryland and the state’s I-95 corridor. Outside the state, the radio network already has been connected to bordering areas in Delaware and Virginia. During later phases, the network will be able to share radio frequencies with bordering areas of Pennsylvania; Washington, D.C.; and West Virginia.
To ensure network security, voice communication on the radio system is encrypted. “That transition goes into the radio and it’s converted to digital data,” Lehr said. “Essentially it’s not a voice being transmitted across the radio waves anymore.”
According to the Maryland Department of Information Technology, the first phase of the system will be built by utilizing existing state infrastructure (radio towers), and the entire project is being developed by Motorola Solutions through a contract the vendor was awarded in 2010.
Governance for Maryland FiRST will be developed by Maryland’s Statewide Interoperability Executive Committee.