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

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== Onondaga County Interoperable Communications System ==
 
== Onondaga County Interoperable Communications System ==
[[Image:OCICS20100901.png|thumb|300px|OCICS control channel data as scene by UniTrunker on a busy night.]]
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[[Image:OCICS20100901.png|thumb|right|300px|OCICS control channel data as scene by [[UniTrunker]] on a busy night.]]
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The Onondaga County Interoperable Communications System is a 15 site Motorola APCO P25 simulcast trunked radio system. 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) and TLC Ambulance (which conducts limited EMS operations in the entire county) both of whom retain their own private VHF radio communications independent of the 911 Center.

Revision as of 22:09, 1 September 2010

The Central New York Interoperable Communications Consortium is a planned multi-county APCO Project 25 complainant project designed to function as "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.

Onondaga County Interoperable Communications System

OCICS control channel data as scene by UniTrunker on a busy night.

The Onondaga County Interoperable Communications System is a 15 site Motorola APCO P25 simulcast trunked radio system. 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) and TLC Ambulance (which conducts limited EMS operations in the entire county) both of whom retain their own private VHF radio communications independent of the 911 Center.