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Difference between revisions of "Central New York Interoperable Communications Consortium (CNYICC)"

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m (removed Category:Mid Atlantic Region; added Sub-Category: New York)
(Updated a couple words, and changed beginning to reflect that all counties are now on the system, with addition of Jefferson in the near future. Updated information about RMMS/AMR in the OCICS section.)
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The Central New York Interoperable Communications Consortium is a planned multi-county  APCO [[Project 25]] compliant project designed to function as an "interoperable land mobile radio communications system, one that immediately supports Fire, EMS and Law Enforcement, and whose design will support others, such as highway, schools, water, and other vital utility and service functions." Currently the Onondaga County Interoperable Communications System (OCICS) is the only segment online and in everyday use. Cayuga County is currently in the planning stages for a UHF P25 system slated for installation in late 2011 which will join the consortium upon its completion.
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{{Infobox_TRS_P25_US_Pub_MultiCt
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|Owner    = New York State
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|County    = [[Cayuga County (NY)|Cayuga]], [[Madison County (NY)|Madison]], [[Onondaga County (NY)|Onondaga]], [[Oswego County (NY)|Oswego]], [[Oneida County (NY)|Oneida]], [[Jefferson County (NY)|Jefferson]]
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|State    = [[New York (US)|New York]]
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|Band      = [[UHF]], [[VHF]]
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| <!-- using parameter "SysType"'s default value -->
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|SysID    = 2AE
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|WACN      = BEE00
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|NAC      = 2A0 (Onondaga Simulcast), 2A4 (Oswego Simulcast), 2A5 (Oneida Simulcast), 2A6 (Jefferson Simulcast), 2A7 (Madison Simulcast), 2A8 (Cayuga Simulcast)
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|Callsigns = {{Callsign|WQDY448}}, {{Callsign|WQKJ409}}, {{Callsign|WQKK218}}, {{Callsign|WQKP897}}, {{Callsign|WQLN992}}, {{Callsign|WQLT768}}, {{Callsign|WQLT878}}, {{Callsign|WQLU267}}, {{Callsign|WQLU268}}, {{Callsign|WQNB579}}, {{Callsign|WQOJ786}}, {{Callsign|WQOJ787}}, {{Callsign|WQXS587}}, {{Callsign|WQYF524}}, {{Callsign|WRCC846}}
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|sid      = 5298
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|state    = new-york
 +
}}
 +
 
 +
The Central New York Interoperable Communications Consortium is a multi-county  APCO [[Project 25]] compliant project designed to function as an "interoperable land mobile radio communications system, one that immediately supports Fire, EMS and Law Enforcement, and whose design will support others, such as highway, schools, water, and other vital utility and service functions." Jefferson County is currently in the planning stages for a UHF P25 system slated for installation in the near future and will join the consortium upon its completion.
  
 
== Onondaga County Interoperable Communications System ==
 
== Onondaga County Interoperable Communications System ==
 
[[Image:OCICS20100901.png|thumb|right|300px|OCICS control channel data viewed with [[UniTrunker]] on a busy night.]]
 
[[Image:OCICS20100901.png|thumb|right|300px|OCICS control channel data viewed with [[UniTrunker]] on a busy night.]]
The Onondaga County Interoperable Communications System is a [http://www.radioreference.com/apps/db/?action=siteMap&sid=5298&type=fcc 15 site] Motorola APCO P25 [[simulcast]] [[trunked radio system]], currently 13 frequency pairs are available for voice communication. Testing of the system began in late 2009 and the Syracuse Police Department became the first agency to go live on the system on February 2, 2010. Onondaga county police agencies followed a month later, with county Fire and EMS agencies approximately two months later. The City of Syracuse Fire Department was the last county public safety agency to switch over to the system in June of 2010. Currently all public safety radio operations for Onondaga County are conducted on this system with the exception of Rural/Metro Medical Services (the primary EMS provider for the city of Syracuse) who retain their own private VHF radio system independent of the 911 Center.
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The Onondaga County Interoperable Communications System is a 15 site Motorola APCO P25 [[simulcast]] [[Trunked Radio Systems|trunked radio system]], currently 13 frequency pairs are available for voice communication. Testing of the system began in late 2009 and the Syracuse Police Department became the first agency to go live on the system on February 2, 2010. Onondaga County police agencies followed a month later, with County Fire and EMS agencies approximately two months later. The City of Syracuse Fire Department was the last county public safety agency to switch over to the system in June of 2010. Currently all public safety radio operations for Onondaga County are conducted on this system. Rural/Metro Medical Services (the primary EMS provider for the city of Syracuse) retained their own private VHF radio system independent of the 911 Center, however in 2016 American Medical Response (successor to Rural/Metro) transitioned to the OCICS for dispatching and tactical operations.
  
 
===Day to Day Operation===
 
===Day to Day Operation===
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Syracuse Fire events that are not assigned a district chief, but require an operations channel (all district chiefs already on calls, stuck elevator, etc.) are assigned channels 7(TG27), [8](TG28), or 9(TG26). All events taking place at Hancock International Airport are assigned to channel 6 (TG29).
 
Syracuse Fire events that are not assigned a district chief, but require an operations channel (all district chiefs already on calls, stuck elevator, etc.) are assigned channels 7(TG27), [8](TG28), or 9(TG26). All events taking place at Hancock International Airport are assigned to channel 6 (TG29).
  
===Radio IDs===
 
 
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All radios on the OCICS are assigned a six digit radio ID. Radios belonging to police agencies begin with 1, fire agency radios begin with 2 (except the Syracuse Fire Department, as noted below), and EMS agency radios begin with 3. The second two digits of the radio ID correspond to a county assigned agency code (Syracuse City Police are assigned 01 for mobiles and 02 for portables). See the [[Onondaga County (NY)]] page for a complete listing of these codes. The final three digits correspond to an individual radio.
 
 
Examples:
 
 
* RID 145183: '''1''' (police agency) + '''45'''(OCSO Road Patrol) + '''183'''(radio 183) = OCSO Road Patrol Radio 143
 
* RID 101374: '''1''' (police agency) + '''01''' (SPD Mobile) + '''374''' (radio 374) = SPD Mobile 374
 
* RID 219108: '''2''' (fire agency) + '''19''' (Fairmount FD) + '''108''' (radio 108) = Fairmount Fire Radio 108
 
* RID 382003: '''3''' (EMS agency) + '''82''' (NAVAC) + '''003''' (radio 003) = NAVAC Radio 3
 
* RID 337011: '''3''' (EMS agency) + '''37''' (Minoa FD) + '''003''' (radio 011) = Minoa Ambulance Radio 3
 
 
Some agencies do seem to have logic in assigning their radio IDs, for example fire radios whose last three digits begin with 00 seem to correspond to chiefs. E.g., 257002 belongs to Solvay Car 2. Also note that SPD Mobile numbers correspond to the vehicle's 'C number' not the number printed on the side of the vehicle.
 
 
====Syracuse Fire Department Radio IDs====
 
 
 
Syracuse Fire Radio IDs begin with 99 (their county agency code). The third digit (and fourth for the Rescue Company, ARFF, and district chiefs) can be used to identify the type of apparatus the radio is assigned to: 1 for Engines, 2 for Trucks, 30 for the Rescue Company, 34 ARFF, and 81 for district chiefs. Fourth (where applicable) and fifth digit represent the individual unit number, e.g. 991''05'' represents a radio belonging to Engine Company 5, while 992''08'' represents a radio belonging to Truck 8. The final digit corresponds to individual radios: 0 is assigned to mobile radios, 1 is the officer's portable, 2-8 are additional portables, 9 is reserved for mobiles on the Minis.
 
 
Examples:
 
 
* RID 991171: '''99''' (SFD) + '''1''' (engine) + '''17''' (17) + '''1''' (Officer's Portable) = SFD Engine 17 Officer's Portable
 
* RID 992080: '''99''' (SFD) + '''2''' (truck) + '''08''' (8) + '''0''' (mobile) = SFD Truck 8 Mobile
 
* RID 991069: '''99''' (SFD) + '''1''' (engine) + '''06''' (6) + '''9''' (mini Mobile) = Mini 6 Mobile
 
* RID 993014: '''99''' (SFD) + '''30''' (rescue) + '''1''' (1) + '''4''' (portable 4) = SFD Rescue Portable 4
 
* RID 998130: '''99''' (SFD) + '''81''' (district chief) + '''3''' (3) + '''0''' (mobile) = SFD Car 3 Mobile
 
 
Radios for other SFD units are indicated by 99 followed by their 3 digit unit ID (612 the fire investigator, 703 the deputy chief, etc.), and then 0 for a mobile, 1-8 for portables, as above.
 
 
Examples:
 
 
* RID 997020: '''99''' (SFD) + '''702''' (702) + '''0''' (mobile) = SFD 702 Mobile
 
* RID 996011: '''99''' (SFD) + '''601''' (601) + '''1''' (portable 1) = SFD 601 Portable 1
 
  
====911 Center Radio IDs====
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==Custon Band Plan==
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A Custom Band Plan that may have to be set in scanner to initially receive any CNYICC traffic
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{{Thread|new-york-radio-discussion-forum|327451-oneida-county-vhf-p25-trunking-10.html| Band Plan Settings}}. Also, please review the [[Simulcast Distortion]] for more info.
  
All agencies on the OCICS are dispatched from the Onondaga County 911 Center. The Village of Skaneateles maintained its own call taking and dispatch operation until late August 2010.
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==Related Links==
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* [[Central New York Interoperable Communications Consortium (CNYICC) Radio IDs]]
  
911 Center radio IDs begin with 91, followed by two digits which appear to correspond an individual dispatch console, followed by two digits which indicate the talkgroup the console is set to. While presumably any console is able to talk on any talkgroup, specific consoles appear to be assigned to be the seat for specific dispatchers as indicated below.
 
  
*10: MRD-3
 
*12: MRD-4
 
*13: MRD-5
 
*14: SPD-3
 
*15: SPD-4
 
*17: OCFC-1
 
*18: SFD Primary
 
*19: OCFC-7
 
*20: SPD-2
 
*21: MRD-2
 
*22: OCFC Support
 
*23: SFD Secondary
 
*25: City of Syracuse Technical Advisor (TA)
 
*26: County Technical Advisor (TA)
 
  
Examples of complete 911 Center radio IDs:
 
  
* 911433: '''91''' (911 Center) + '''14''' (SPD-3 Dispatch Position) + '''33''' (TG 33, SPD-3) = 911 Center SPD-3 Dispatcher speaking on SPD Channel 3 (expected)
 
* 911345: '''91''' (911 Center) + '''13''' (MRD-5 Dispatch Position) + '''45''' (TG 45, MRD-1) = 911 Center MRD-5 Dispatcher speaking on MRD-1 (unexpected)
 
  
This analysis may require some revision in the future, but for the time being the logic seems sound and makes appropriate predictions. One may occasionally see the OCFC-7 dispatcher speaking on OCFC-1, but never see them speaking on a City Police talkgroup.
 
  
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Return to Wiki page: [[Trunked Radio Systems (NY)]]<br/>
  
[[Category:New York]]
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[[Category:New York Trunked Radio Systems]]
[[Category:Trunking Information]]
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[[Category:New York Trunking Information]]

Revision as of 18:52, 9 September 2020

Multi-County
Public Trunked Radio System


NameCentral New York Interoperable Communications Consortium (CNYICC)
OwnerNew York State
Owner TypePublic
CountiesCayuga, Madison, Onondaga, Oswego, Oneida, Jefferson
StateNew York
CountryUnited States

System Details
BandUHF, VHF
TypeProject 25 Phase I
ID2AE
WACNBEE00
NAC2A0 (Onondaga Simulcast), 2A4 (Oswego Simulcast), 2A5 (Oneida Simulcast), 2A6 (Jefferson Simulcast), 2A7 (Madison Simulcast), 2A8 (Cayuga Simulcast)

FCC Callsign(s)
WQDY448, WQKJ409, WQKK218, WQKP897, WQLN992, WQLT768, WQLT878, WQLU267, WQLU268, WQNB579, WQOJ786, WQOJ787, WQXS587, WQYF524, WRCC846

System-specific links
DatabaseFCC Site Map
ForumRR Site Map

Other Resources
Trunktracking
FAQ
Trunktracking
Glossary

Wiki FAQMediaWiki
QuickRefPDF Card

Wiki HomeCollaboration Gateway → United States → New YorkCayuga, Madison, Onondaga, Oswego, Oneida, Jefferson Counties → Central New York Interoperable Communications Consortium (CNYICC) TRS

Welcome to the Central New York Interoperable Communications Consortium (CNYICC) collaboration article, a Multi-County Public Trunked Radio System located in Cayuga, Madison, Onondaga, Oswego, Oneida, Jefferson Counties, New York, United States.
This is where you, the user, may index any articles you develop for scanning related topics for this Trunked Radio System.



The Central New York Interoperable Communications Consortium is a multi-county APCO Project 25 compliant project designed to function as an "interoperable land mobile radio communications system, one that immediately supports Fire, EMS and Law Enforcement, and whose design will support others, such as highway, schools, water, and other vital utility and service functions." Jefferson County is currently in the planning stages for a UHF P25 system slated for installation in the near future and will join the consortium upon its completion.

Onondaga County Interoperable Communications System

OCICS control channel data viewed with UniTrunker on a busy night.

The Onondaga County Interoperable Communications System is a 15 site Motorola APCO P25 simulcast trunked radio system, currently 13 frequency pairs are available for voice communication. Testing of the system began in late 2009 and the Syracuse Police Department became the first agency to go live on the system on February 2, 2010. Onondaga County police agencies followed a month later, with County Fire and EMS agencies approximately two months later. The City of Syracuse Fire Department was the last county public safety agency to switch over to the system in June of 2010. Currently all public safety radio operations for Onondaga County are conducted on this system. Rural/Metro Medical Services (the primary EMS provider for the city of Syracuse) retained their own private VHF radio system independent of the 911 Center, however in 2016 American Medical Response (successor to Rural/Metro) transitioned to the OCICS for dispatching and tactical operations.

Day to Day Operation


Police agencies on the system are dispatched from dedicated area talkgroups (3 for county police agencies, and 2 for Syracuse city police). Larger scale events (hostage situations, chases, etc.) are often moved from one of area talkgroups to "Channel 1" (TG 31 for the City of Syracuse, TG45 for the county) to avoid disruption of routine dispatch operations. Additional tactical channels are assigned as needed.

County Fire and EMS are dispatched from talkgroups 1 and 7 respectively. Events that are anticipated to require a dedicated operations channel are assigned a one of 10 'tact' channels in the following order: 3,4,6,8,9,10,11,12,13,2. Tact-2 (TG 2) is reserved for communications for events not requiring the assignment of a dedicated talkgroup, and as such is assigned last.

City of Syracuse Fire dispatch assigns operations channels based upon the district chief assigned to the call. Channels 2 and 12 for Car 2's first due; channels 3 and 13 for Car 3's first due; and channels 4 and 14 for Car 4's first due. These pairs correspond to talkgroups 22, 23, and 24 respectively. The assignment of two channels represents a subtlety in the programing of SFD Radios: channels 2, 3, and 4 correspond to three UHF simplex frequencies which are used as direct talk fireground frequencies ( the Syracuse Fire Department expressed concern about the ability of the TRS to provide adequate fireground coverage during the design phase of the system). Each of the district chief's vehicles contains a repeater which repeats the simlex frequency out to the TRS on the appropriate talkgroup. Channels 12, 13, and 14 are direct access channels to TGs 22, 23, and 24.

Syracuse Fire events that are not assigned a district chief, but require an operations channel (all district chiefs already on calls, stuck elevator, etc.) are assigned channels 7(TG27), [8](TG28), or 9(TG26). All events taking place at Hancock International Airport are assigned to channel 6 (TG29).


Custon Band Plan

A Custom Band Plan that may have to be set in scanner to initially receive any CNYICC traffic Band Plan Settings Thread. Also, please review the Simulcast Distortion for more info.

Related Links




Return to Wiki page: Trunked Radio Systems (NY)