9-11 Commission Finds First Responder Communication Problems Still Exists

Bills to set aside the D-Block still remain unpassed in the House and Senate
A Trimble radio frequency tag reader, right, is seen on a Worcester, Mass., firefighter, as fellow firefighter Lt. Jeffery Dubeau, left, pauses during a simulated rescue exercise using safety tracking devices on the campus of Worcester Polytechnic Institute, in Worcester, Mass., Tuesday, Aug. 2, 2011. As the ten year anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks approaches, researchers, fire fighters, and government officials are working to perfect technology that tracks the location and vital signs of first responders. (AP Photo/Steven Senne)
Published Thursday, September 1, 2011

WASHINGTON (AP) — Amid the chaos of the Sept. 11 attacks in 2001, emergency responders found they could not communicate with each other. That problem persists 10 years later, according to a review of the 9/11 Commission's recommendations.

A National Preparedness Group report released Wednesday concludes that the recommendation that a nationwide broadband network for emergency responders be created "continues to languish."

"Despite the lives at stake, the recommendation to improve radio interoperability for first responders has stalled because of a political fight over whether to allocate 10 MHz of radio spectrum ... directly to public safety for a nationwide network, or auction it off to a commercial wireless bidder who would then be required to provide priority access on its network dedicated to public safety during emergencies," says the report, whose authors include 9/11 Commission chairmen Lee Hamilton and Thomas Kean.

Law enforcement and emergency responders around the country have long supported the creation of the communication network. In January, President Barack Obama announced his support for allocating the radio space, known as the D-block spectrum, to police and other emergency workers.

Bills that would set aside the D-block and create a communications network have been introduced in both the House and the Senate this year but so far have not been passed in either chamber.

Several big wireless carriers have supported auctioning off the airwaves to the wireless industry, a move that the government has estimated would raise about $3.1 billion. That could help pay to build a public safety communications network.

The Federal Communications Commission has tried to auction off the D Block before. But that 2008 auction required that the winning bidder help build a network to be shared by first responders and give them priority in an emergency. It did not attract any serious bidders.

The National Preparedness Group report said statewide communications interoperability plans and the creation of a national emergency communications plan have improved emergency coordination across different jurisdictions. But more work needs to be done and the ultimate solution, the report said, is to follow the 9/11 Commission's recommendation and create a nationwide communications network.

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9-11 Commission Finds First Responder Communication Problems Still Exists

Bills to set aside the D-Block still remain unpassed in the House and Senate
A Trimble radio frequency tag reader, right, is seen on a Worcester, Mass., firefighter, as fellow firefighter Lt. Jeffery Dubeau, left, pauses during a simulated rescue exercise using safety tracking devices on the campus of Worcester Polytechnic Institute, in Worcester, Mass., Tuesday, Aug. 2, 2011. As the ten year anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks approaches, researchers, fire fighters, and government officials are working to perfect technology that tracks the location and vital signs of first responders. (AP Photo/Steven Senne)

Worcester Firefighters Help Scientists Get Closer to Better Firefighter Tracking


Massachusetts firefighters crawled into a three-story brick laboratory building at Worcester Polytechnic Institute to test one of the new devices.