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Testimony:

Before the Subcommittees of the Government Reform Committee, House of 
Representatives:

United States General Accounting Office:

GAO:

For Release on Delivery Expected at 10:00 a.m. EST:

Thursday, November 6, 2003:

HOMELAND SECURITY:

Challenges in Achieving Interoperable Communications for First 
Responders:

Statement of William O. Jenkins, Jr. Director, Homeland Security and 
Justice Issues:

GAO-04-231T:

GAO Highlights:

Highlights of GAO-04-231T, a report to Congressional Requesters, 
Subcommittees of House Government Reform Committee 

Why GAO Did This Study:

The inability of first responders—police officers, firemen, hazardous 
materials teams, emergency medical service personnel, and others—to 
communicate effectively with one another as needed during an emergency 
is a long-standing and widely recognized problem in many areas across 
the country. When first responders cannot communicate effectively as 
needed, it can literally cost lives—of both emergency responders and 
those they are trying to assist. At the request of the Chairman of the 
full committee, we are examining the barriers to improved 
interoperability and the roles that federal, state, and local 
governments can play in improving wireless interoperability 
communications.

What GAO Found:

Interoperability problems existed among public safety agencies for 
many years prior to the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. Reports 
on incidents have documented a number of problems in public safety 
wireless communications. For over 15 years the Federal Government has 
been concerned about public safety spectrum issues, including 
communications interoperability issues. A variety of federal agencies 
have been involved in defining the problem and identifying potential 
solutions. In addition, Congress has taken several actions over the 
past two decades to address the availability and use of public safety 
wireless spectrum. The events of September 11 have resulted in greater 
public and governmental focus on the role of first responders and 
their capacity to respond to emergencies, including those resulting 
from terrorist incidents. 

The interoperability issues that the nation faces today did not arise 
overnight and they will not be successfully addressed overnight. 
Federal, state, and local governments face several major challenges in 
addressing interoperability in their wireless communications.

* The first challenge is to clearly identify and define the problem. 
For example, it is important to recognize that interoperable 
communications is not an end in itself, but it is rather one component 
for achieving an important goal--the ability to respond effectively to 
and mitigate incidents that require the coordinated actions of first 
responders.

* The second challenge is whether and how to establish national 
interoperability performance goals and standards and balance them with 
the flexibility needed to address differences in state, regional and 
local needs and conditions.

* The third challenge is defining the roles of federal, state, and 
local governments and other entities in defining the problem, 
implementing any national goals and standards, and assessing 
alternative means of achieving those goals and standards. 

The fundamental barrier to successfully addressing these challenges 
has been the lack of effective, collaborative, interdisciplinary and 
intergovernmental planning. No one first responder group or 
governmental agency can successfully “fix” the interoperability 
problems that face our nation. It will require the partnership, 
leadership, and coordinated planning of everyone involved.

What GAO Recommends:

Because our work is ongoing, we are not yet making recommendations. 
However based on our work to date, we identify several major 
challenges federal, state, and local governments must address. 
Effectively addressing these challenges requires collaboration of all 
first responders and all levels of government. Failure to do so risks 
spending funds ineffectively and creating new problems in our attempt 
to resolve existing ones.  

www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-04-231T.

To view the full product, including the scope and methodology, click 
on the link above. For more information, contact William Jenkins, Jr. 
at (202) 512-8757 or jenkinswo@gao.gov.

[End of section]

Messrs. Chairmen and Members of the Subcommittees:

I appreciate the opportunity to be here today to discuss the critical 
issue of wireless interoperable communications for first responders. 
The inability of first responders--police officers, fire fighters, 
emergency medical service personnel, public health officials, and 
others--to communicate effectively with one another as needed during an 
emergency is a long-standing and widely recognized problem in many 
areas across the country. Reports have shown that when first responders 
cannot communicate effectively as needed, it can literally cost lives-
-of both emergency responders and those they are trying to assist. 
Thus, effective interoperable communications between and among wireless 
communications systems used by federal, state, and local public safety 
agencies is generally accepted as not only desirable but essential for 
the protection of life and property. The effective interoperability of 
these wireless systems permits a rapid and coordinated response to an 
emergency incident, whether that incident is a "routine" spill from an 
overturned tanker truck or railcar, a natural disaster, or a terrorist 
attack.

At the request of the Chairman of the full committee, we are examining 
the barriers to improved interoperability and the roles that federal, 
state, and local governments can play in improving wireless 
interoperability communications.[Footnote 1] Our work is ongoing. To 
date, we have contacted state and local officials in several states, 
attended professional meetings, and opened discussion with the 
Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and other key federal agencies. 
We are conducting our work in accordance with generally accepted 
government auditing standards. My testimony today focuses on the broad 
and complex nature of the interoperability issue and the challenges the 
nation faces in addressing this issue.

Background:

Interoperability problems existed among public safety agencies for many 
years prior to the September 11 attacks on the Pentagon and New York 
City. Reports on incidents have documented a number of problems in 
public safety wireless communications. For example, the National Task 
Force on Interoperability (NTFI) documented interoperability problems 
in several states - including South Dakota, Indiana, and Minnesota--
that had developed over a number of years.[Footnote 2]

For over 15 years the federal government has been concerned about 
public safety spectrum issues, including communications 
interoperability issues. A variety of federal agencies have been 
involved in defining the problem and identifying potential solutions. 
In addition, Congress has taken several actions over the past two 
decades to address the availability and use of the public safety 
wireless spectrum.

The events of September 11, 2001, have resulted in greater public and 
governmental focus on the role of first responders and their capacity 
to respond to emergencies, including those resulting from terrorist 
incidents. One result has been significantly increased federal funding 
for state and local first responders, including funding to improve 
interoperable communications among federal, state, and local first 
responders. In fiscal year 2003 , Congress appropriated at least $154 
million for interoperability through a variety of grants administered 
by the Department of Homeland Security, the Department of Justice, and 
other agencies.

In addition to appropriating more funds, the executive branch and 
Congress have attempted to consolidate federal efforts and coordinate 
federal grant programs. Within the executive branch, the Office of 
Management and Budget in 2001 created the Wireless Public SAFEty 
Interoperable COMmunications Program, or SAFECOM, [Footnote 3] to unify 
the federal government's efforts to help coordinate the work at the 
federal, state, local and tribal levels, in order to provide reliable 
public safety communications and achieve national wireless 
communications interoperability.[Footnote 4]

Summary:

The interoperability issues that the nation faces today did not arise 
overnight and they will not be successfully addressed overnight. 
Federal, state, and local governments face several major challenges in 
addressing interoperability in their wireless communications. The first 
challenge is to clearly identify and define the problem, recognizing 
that interoperable communications is but a means to an end-the ability 
to respond effectively to any incident that requires the coordinated 
actions of first responders. The second is whether and how to establish 
national interoperability performance goals and standards and to 
balance them with the flexibility needed to address differences in 
state, regional, and local needs and conditions. The third challenge is 
defining the roles of federal, state, and local governments and other 
entities in identifying the communication problem, implementing any 
national performance goals and standards, and assessing alternative 
means of achieving those goals and standards. The fundamental barrier 
to successfully addressing these challenges has been the lack of 
effective, collaborative, interdisciplinary and intergovernmental 
planning. No one first responder group or governmental agency can 
successfully "fix" the interoperability problems that face our nation. 
It will require the partnership, leadership, and coordinated planning 
of everyone involved .

The First Challenge: Identifying and Defining the Interoperability 
Problem:

In discussing the issue of interoperable communications, it is 
important to recognize that interoperable communications is not merely 
a technological issue or an end in itself. It is rather a key means of 
achieving a desirable objective--the effective response to and 
mitigation of events or incidents that require the coordinated actions 
of emergency responders. These events could encompass a wide range of 
possibilities, such as multi-vehicle accidents, major floods or 
wildfires, or a terrorist attack that involved thousands of injuries.

Interoperable communications is also but one component, although an 
important one, of an effective incident command planning and operations 
structure. As a standard practice, public safety agencies are to 
establish communications capabilities to support command and control of 
their operations at an incident scene. Determining the most appropriate 
means of achieving interoperable communications must flow from an 
effective planning and operations structure that identifies who is in 
charge and who must be able to communicate what information to whom 
under what circumstances. For example, there are likely to be both 
similarities and differences in the interoperable communications 
capacities, protocols, and participants associated with responding to 
seasonally predictable wildfires and terrorist attacks that involve 
biological agents.

Defining the range of interoperability capacity needed requires 
identifying the types of events for which interoperable communications 
would be needed, the participants involved in responding to those 
events--by professional discipline and jurisdiction--and an 
operational definition of who is charge and who would need to 
communicate what types of information (e.g., voice, data, or both) with 
whom under what circumstances. These are not easy tasks, and they 
require both a multi-disciplinary and multi-jurisdictional 
perspective. But these tasks are a precursor to assessing the current 
problems--e.g., operational, technical, and fiscal--that exist in 
meeting interoperable communication needs and alternative means of 
achieving identified interoperable communications needs.

But more importantly, interoperability is not a static issue--it is an 
issue that is affected by changes in technology and the changing events 
and threats for which first responders must be prepared. Thus, there is 
no single, long-term solution; the issue is one that must be 
periodically reassessed as needs and technology change.

Interoperability Is Not a Static Issue:

The issues and problems in defining and scoping what is meant by 
"interoperability" are not static. They evolve over time in a fluid and 
ever-changing environment of evolving threats and events for which we 
need to be prepared to respond, new operational requirements, new 
spectrum bands for public safety use, and new technology.

The Evolving Definition of First Responders:

Public safety officials generally recognize that interoperable 
communications is the ability to talk with whom they want, when they 
want, when authorized, but not the ability to talk with everyone all of 
the time. However, there is no standard definition of communications 
interoperability. Nor is there a "one size fits all" requirement for 
who needs to talk to whom.

Traditionally, first responders have been considered to be fire, police 
and emergency medical service personnel. However, in a description of 
public safety challenges, a federal official noted that the attacks of 
September 11, 2001, have blurred the lines between public safety and 
national security. According to the Commission, effective preparedness 
for combating terrorism at the local level requires a network that 
includes public health departments, hospitals and other medical 
providers, and offices of emergency management, in addition to the 
traditional police, fire, and emergency medical services first 
responders.[Footnote 5] Furthermore, Congress recognized the expanded 
definition of first responder in the Homeland Security Act of 2002, 
which defined "emergency response providers" as "Federal, State, and 
local emergency public safety, law enforcement, emergency response, 
emergency medical (including hospital emergency facilities), and 
related personnel, agencies, and authorities."[Footnote 6]

Reexamining the Jurisdictional Boundaries of Interoperability:

The context of the communications also affects the definition of the 
problem. Two key studies in the late 1990s sponsored by the Department 
of Justice (DOJ) and the Public Safety Wireless Network (PSWN)[Footnote 
7] program provide a nationwide picture of wireless interoperability 
issues among federal, state, and local police, fire, and emergency 
medical service agencies at that time.[Footnote 8] Both studies 
describe most local public safety agencies as interacting with other 
local agencies on a daily or weekly basis. As a result, most local 
agencies had more confidence in establishing radio links with one 
another than with state agencies, with whom they less frequently 
interact. Local public safety agencies interact with federal agencies 
least of all, with a smaller percentage of local agencies expressing 
confidence in their ability to establish radio links with federal 
agencies. The events of September 11, 2001, have resulted in a 
reexamination of the circumstances in which interoperable 
communications should extend across political jurisdictions and levels 
of government.

Interoperable Needs Are Scenario Driven and Change Over Time:

Another issue is the broad range of scenarios in which interoperable 
communications are required. Public safety officials have pointed out 
that interoperability is situation specific, based on whether 
communications are needed for (1) "mutual-aid responses" or routine 
day-to-day coordination between two local agencies; (2) extended task 
force operations involving members of different agencies coming 
together to work on a common problem; or (3) a major event that 
requires response from a variety of local, state, and federal agencies. 
One official breaks the major event category into three separate types 
of events:

* planned events, such as the Olympics, for which plans can be made in 
advance;

* recurring events, such as major wildfires and hurricanes, that can be 
expected every year and for which contingency plans can be prepared 
based on past experience, and:

* unplanned events, such as the September 11th attacks, that can 
rapidly overwhelm the ability of local forces to handle the problem.

Technological Changes Also Affect Interoperability:

As technology changes, it presents new problems and opportunities for 
achieving and maintaining effective interoperable communications. 
According to one official, in the 1980s, a method of voice transmission 
called "trunking" became available that allowed more efficient use of 
spectrum. However, three different and incompatible trunking 
technologies developed, and these systems are not interoperable. This 
official noted that as mobile data communications becomes more 
prevalent and new digital technologies are introduced, standards become 
more important.

Technical standards for interoperable communications are still under 
development. Beginning in 1989, a partnership between industry and the 
public safety user community developed what is known as Project 25 (P-
25) standards. According to the PSWN program office, Project 25 
standards remain the only user-defined set of standards in the United 
States for public safety communications. The Department of Homeland 
Security has recently decided to purchase radios that incorporate the 
P-25 standards for the each of the nation's 28 urban search and rescue 
teams. PSWN believes P-25 is an important step toward achieving 
interoperability, but the standards do not mandate interoperability 
among all manufacturers' systems. Standards development continues today 
as new technologies emerge that meet changing user needs and new policy 
requirements.

In addition, new public safety mission requirements for video, imaging, 
and high speed data transfers, new and highly complex digital 
communications systems, and the use of commercial wireless systems, are 
potential sources of new interoperability problems.

Availability of new spectrum can also result in new technologies and 
require further development of technical standards. For example, the 
FCC recently designated a new band of spectrum, the 4.9 Gigahertz (GHz) 
band, for public safety uses and sought comments on various issues, 
including licensing and service rules. The FCC provided this additional 
spectrum to public safety users to support new broadband applications, 
such as high-speed digital technologies and wireless local area 
networks for incident scene management. The Federal Communications 
(FCC) in particular requested comments on the implementation of 
technical standards for fixed and mobile operations on the band. The 
National Public Safety Telecommunications Council[Footnote 9] has 
established a task force that includes work on interoperability 
standards for the 4.9 GHz band.

Second Challenge: Establishing National Goals and Requirements:

When the interoperability problem has been sufficiently defined and 
bounded, the next challenge will be to develop national 
interoperability performance goals and technical standards that balance 
consistency with the need for flexibility in adapting them to state and 
regional needs and circumstances.

Lack of National Requirements:

One key barrier to development of a national interoperability strategy 
is the lack of a statement of national mission requirements for public 
safety--what set of communications capabilities should be built or 
acquired--and a strategy to get there. The report of the Independent 
Task Force sponsored by the Council on Foreign Relations on emergency 
responders said national standards of preparedness have not been 
defined and that the lack of a methodology to determine national 
requirements for emergency preparedness constitutes a national 
crisis.[Footnote 10] The report recommended these standards be prepared 
for federal, state, and local emergency responders in such areas as 
training, interoperable communications systems, and response 
equipment. SAFECOM officials have noted that no standard, guidance, or 
national strategy exists on interoperability. DOJ officials told us 
they are working with SAFECOM to develop a statement of requirements 
that should be ready for release by May 1, 2004.

Need for an Interoperability Blueprint:

To guide the creation of interoperable communications, there must be an 
explicit and commonly understood and agreed-to blueprint, or 
architecture, for effectively and efficiently guiding modernization 
efforts. For a decade, GAO has promoted the use of architectures, 
recognizing them as a crucial means to a challenging goal: agency 
operational structures that are optimally defined in both business and 
technological environments. An enterprise architecture provides a clear 
and comprehensive picture of an entity, whether it is an organization 
(e.g., a federal department or agency) or a functional or mission area 
that cuts across more than one organization (e.g., financial 
management). In August 2003, DHS released its initial enterprise 
architecture that it described as conceptual in nature.. We are in the 
process of reviewing this architecture at the request of the Chairman, 
Subcommittee on Technology, Information Policy, Intergovernmental 
Relations and the Census, Committee on Government Reform.

Need For Flexibility:

There is no single "silver bullet" solution to interoperability needs. 
Our ongoing work indicates that communications interoperability 
problems facing any given locality or state tend to be situation 
specific, with no universally applicable solution. For example, the 
Association of Public Safety Communications Officials (APCO) noted in 
its White Paper on Homeland Security that various methods are possible 
to achieve interoperability but planning is an essential first step to 
choosing a solution. APCO noted that interoperability does not involve 
a single product or system approach; rather it is accomplished with a 
variety of solutions with a focus on the first responder. APCO noted 
that what is an appropriate interoperability solution varies with the 
operation of the particular government agencies, their funding, their 
physical location, and other individual circumstances.[Footnote 11]

In addition, the Public Safety Wireless Advisory Committee's (PSWAC) 
final report noted that the public safety community has some common 
operational requirements, such as dispatch communications and 
transmission of operational and tactical instructions. However, the 
PSWAC report also describes agencies' specialized requirements that are 
based on specific missions and operating environments. For example, the 
report notes forestry and state police have long distance requirements 
where foliage can be a problem for higher frequency systems. In 
contrast, a metropolitan police department may need highly reliable in-
building coverage, which is not a requirement for state police mobile 
operations. Those state and local officials we have interviewed to date 
have stated that they want to retain flexibility when addressing 
communications issues. For example, Virginia state officials noted that 
geographical locations within the state present different 
interoperability requirements. They said interoperability problems 
differ from locality to locality, and that solutions must be developed 
that fit the specific circumstances of the individual geography and 
situation.

Third Challenge: Need to Define Intergovernmental Roles:

As noted above, the federal government has a long history in addressing 
federal, state, and local government public safety issues-in particular 
interoperability issues. The Government Reform Committee has also 
recently contributed to the development of policies. In October 2002 
the Committee issued a report entitled "How Can the Federal Government 
Better Assist State and Local Governments in Preparing for a 
Biological, Chemical, or Nuclear Attack "(Report 107-766). The 
Committee's first finding was that incompatible communication systems 
impede intergovernmental coordination efforts. The Committee 
recommended that the federal government take a leadership role in 
resolving the communications interoperability problem.

Federal Efforts to Establish A Leadership Role:

The federal role in addressing the interoperability of public safety 
wireless communications continues to evolve. Today, a combination of 
many federal agencies, programs, and associations are involved in 
coordinating emergency communications. In June 2003, SAFECOM partnered 
with the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and the 
National Institute of Justice (NIJ) to hold a summit that brought 
together over 60 entities involved with communications interoperability 
policy setting or programs. According to NIST, the summit familiarized 
key interoperability players with work being done by others and 
provided insight into where additional federal resources may be needed.

The SAFECOM program was initially established within Justice in 2001 
and was transferred to the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) 
in 2002 before being brought into DHS in early 2003. The current 
director said his program is responsible for outreach to local, state, 
and federal public safety agencies to assist in interoperability 
planning and implementation. In an August 2003 briefing, SAFECOM stated 
its role is to serve "as the umbrella program within the federal 
government to coordinate the efforts of local, tribal, state and 
federal public safety agencies working to improve public safety 
response through more effective, efficient, interoperable wireless 
communications." In the briefing, SAFECOM officials said they have 
begun to implement this coordination role by setting objectives to 
develop a national public safety communications strategy, providing 
supporting standards and guidance; developing funding mechanisms and 
guidance, and creating a national training and technical assistance 
program.

SAFECOM officials have also stated that SAFECOM has taken several other 
actions to implement its role as the umbrella program to coordinate 
actions of the federal government. For example, in coordination with 
officials of other agencies, it developed guidance for federal grants 
supporting public safety communications and interoperability. The 
guidance is designed to provide an outline of who is eligible for the 
grants, purposes for which grant funds can be used and eligibility 
specifications for applicants. The guidance requires that, at a 
minimum, applicants must" define the objectives of what the applicant 
is ultimately trying to accomplish and how the proposed project would 
fit into an overall effort to increase interoperability, as well as 
identify potential partnerships for agreements." Additionally, the 
guidance recommends, but does not require, that applicants establish a 
governance group consisting of local, tribal, state, and federal 
entities from relevant public safety disciplines and purchase 
interoperable equipment that is compliant with phase one of Project-25 
standards.

Although SAFECOM is the umbrella program to coordinate actions of the 
federal government, it does not include all major federal efforts aimed 
at promoting wireless interoperability for first responders. 
Specifically, the Justice Department continues to play a major role in 
interoperability after the establishment of DHS. Key Justice programs-
the Advanced Generation of Interoperability for Law Enforcement (AGILE) 
and the Community Oriented Policing Services-did not transition to the 
SAFECOM program in the new Department of Homeland Security. AGILE is 
the Department of Justice program to assist state and local law 
enforcement agencies to effectively and efficiently communicate with 
one another across agency and jurisdictional boundaries. It is 
dedicated to studying interoperability options and advising state and 
local law enforcement, fire fighters, and emergency technicians. The 
SAFECOM program director also said most of the federal research and 
development on prototypes is being conducted within the AGILE program. 
The Department of Justice said it is also creating a database for all 
federal grants to provide a single source of information for states and 
localities to access, and to allow federal agencies to coordinate 
federal funding awards to state and local agencies. SAFECOM and AGILE 
officials told us they have an informal, but close working relationship 
today, and that they are negotiating a memorandum of understanding 
between the two programs. Federal officials also told us that efforts 
are also under way by SAFECOM, AGILE, and other federal agencies to 
coordinate work on technical assistance to state and local governments 
and to develop and set interoperability standards. The SAFECOM program 
may continue to face challenges in assuming a leadership role for the 
federal government while these significant Justice programs remain 
outside its domain.

SAFECOM officials will face complex issues when they address public 
safety spectrum management and coordination. The National Governors' 
Guide to Emergency Management noted that extensive coordination will be 
required between the FCC and the National Telecomunications and 
Information Agency (NTIA) to provide adequate spectrum and to enhance 
shared local, state, and federal communications. However, the current 
legal framework for domestic spectrum management is divided between the 
NTIA within the Department of Commerce, which regulates federal 
government spectrum use, and the Federal Communications Commission, 
which regulates state, local, and other nonfederal spectrum use. In a 
September 2002 report on spectrum management and coordination, GAO 
found that FCC's and NTIA's efforts to manage their respective areas of 
responsibility were not guided by a national spectrum 
strategy.[Footnote 12] The FCC and the NTIA have conducted independent 
spectrum planning efforts and have recently taken steps to improve 
coordination, but they have not yet implemented long-standing 
congressional directives to conduct joint, national spectrum planning. 
We recommended that the FCC and the NTIA develop a strategy for 
establishing a clearly defined national spectrum plan and submit a 
report to the appropriate congressional committees. In a January 2003 
report, we discussed several barriers to reforming spectrum management 
in the United States.[Footnote 13]

State Role in Interoperability Issues Is Evolving:

The role that state and local governments will play in public safety 
communications is evolving. This role is being defined by states and 
local governments as they address problems they recognize exist in 
their communications systems and by the FCC and the NTIA. As noted by 
the National Governors Association (NGA), many states are establishing 
a foundation for cooperation and statewide planning through memorandums 
of understanding or similar agreements.

Several states have or are taking executive and legislative actions to 
address communications planning and interoperability planning. For 
example, the Missouri State Interoperability Executive Committee was 
created by the Missouri Department of Public Safety to enhance 
communications interoperability among public safety entities in 
Missouri by promoting available tools and relationships. The Missouri 
State Interoperability Executive Committee established a Memorandum of 
Understanding (MOU) that instructs public safety agencies within the 
state to use the FCC designated interoperability channels under an 
Incident Command/Incident Management structure. The MOU also attempts 
to diminish operational interoperability barriers by creating common 
operating procedures for the agencies to use on the channels. 
Furthermore, in order to create a comprehensive approach to 
interoperability that addresses new homeland security concerns, the 
State of Missouri enacted the "Missouri Uniform Communications Act for 
Homeland Security", which established the State's "Public Safety 
Communications Committee." This Committee is composed of 
representatives from the Department of Public Safety, Office of 
Homeland Security, Department of Conservation and Department of 
Transportation. The committee reviews all public safety agencies' plans 
that request state or federal wireless communications funds and relies 
on the recommendations of the Missouri Interoperability Executive 
Committee to ensure that state decisions enhance interoperability.

Another state that uses the State Interoperability Executive Committee 
structure to enhance communications interoperability is the State of 
Washington, whose committee was established by state legislation 
effective July 1, 2003. The Washington Committee was created under the 
Information Services Board within the Department of Information 
Services. The Committee's members include representatives from the 
Military, Transportation, Information Services and Natural Resources 
departments; the Washington State Patrol; state and local fire chiefs; 
police chiefs; sheriffs; and state and local emergency managers. 
Washington legislation requires the Committee to submit to the State 
legislature an inventory of all public safety systems within the state 
and a plan to ensure the interoperability of those systems. The 
Committee was given the authority to develop policies and procedures 
for emergency communications systems across the state and to serve as 
the point of contact for the FCC in the allocation, use and licensing 
of radio spectrum for public safety and emergency communication 
systems.

Federal actions to support state efforts that address wireless 
interoperability issues are still evolving. On the one hand, the Public 
Safety Wireless Network program has supported state efforts to improve 
multistate and individual statewide planning and coordination through a 
number of projects that emphasize a regional approach. However, two 
agencies of the federal government-the FCC and the NTIA-set rules and 
regulations for state and local governments and federal government 
wireless systems respectively.

The Regional or Shared Approach:

State and local efforts to address interoperability issues are 
widespread. The National Governors Association said in its recent Guide 
to Emergency Management that interoperable equipment, procedures, and 
standards for emergency responders are key to improving the 
effectiveness of mutual aid agreements with other states and other 
jurisdictions. The NGA guide calls for governors and their state 
homeland security directors to:

* develop a statewide vision for interoperable communications;

* ensure adequate wireless spectrum is available to accommodate all 
users;

* invest in new communications infrastructure;

* develop standards for technology and equipment, and partner with 
government and private industry.

Specifically, states are taking action to facilitate strategic planning 
and interoperability planning that emphasize a shared approach at the 
multistate, state, and local levels. The Public Safety Wireless Network 
report notes that although in the past public safety agencies have 
addressed interoperability on an individual basis, more recently, 
local, state, and federal agencies have come to realize that they 
cannot do it alone. The report also notes that officials at all levels 
of government are now taking action to improve coordination and 
facilitate multi-jurisdictional interoperability. We talked to 
officials from several states about their states' efforts to address 
interoperability issues on a regional basis. For example;

* State officials from Kentucky, Indiana, Illinois, Ohio, and Michigan 
have combined efforts to form a Mid-west Consortium to promote 
interstate interoperability. They have taken actions to form an 
interstate committee to develop interoperability plans and solicit 
support from key players such as local public safety agencies. The 
governors of the states have agreed to sign an MOU to signify that each 
state is willing to be interoperable with the other states and will 
provide communication assistance and resources to the other states, to 
the extent that it does not harm their own state.

* In Florida, the governor of the state issued an executive order in 
2001 to establish seven Regional Domestic Security Task Forces that 
make up the entire state. Each of the regional task forces has a 
committee on interoperable communications under Florida's Executive 
Interoperable Technologies Committee. The Florida legislature 
supported that effort by establishing the Task Forces in law and 
formally designating the Florida Department of Law Enforcement and the 
Division of Emergency Management as the lead agencies. The Task Forces 
consist of agencies from Fire/Rescue, Emergency Management, and public 
health and hospitals, as well as law enforcement. In addition, it 
includes partnerships with education/schools, business and private 
industry.

Statewide Interoperability Plans:

Public safety representatives have stressed the importance of planning 
in addressing communications interoperability issues. The Association 
of Public Safety Communications Officials (APCO) has emphasized the 
importance of planning in addressing communications interoperability 
problems. In its Homeland Security white paper, APCO said that a plan 
for responding to terrorist events should include a section on how to 
address interoperability requirements. The creation of state 
interoperability plans could help reduce the current fragmented public 
safety communications planning process. Public safety agencies have 
historically planned and acquired communications systems for their own 
jurisdictions without concern for interoperability. This meant that 
each local and state agency developed communications systems to meet 
their own requirements, without regard to interoperability requirements 
to talk to adjacent jurisdictions. For example, a PSWN anlaysis of Fire 
and EMS communications interoperability found a significant need for 
coordinated approaches, relationship building, and information 
sharing. However, the PSWN program office found that public safety 
agencies have traditionally developed or updated their radio systems 
independently to meet specific mission needs. Each agency developed a 
sense of "ownership", leading to "turf issues" and resistance to 
change.

The SAFECOM program has reached similar conclusions. According to 
SAFECOM, the priorities of local and state public safety communications 
systems are first, to provide reliable agency specific communications; 
second, to provide local interagency communications; and third, to 
provide reliable interagency local/state/federal communications. In a 
August 11, 2003, briefing document, SAFECOM noted that limited and 
fragmented planning and cooperation was one barrier to public safety 
wireless communications. SAFECOM noted a complex environment of over 
2.5 million public safety first responders within more than 44,000 
agencies and the fragmented command structure-where each Chief of 
Police sees himself as the Chairman of the Joint Staff in his 
jurisdiction-but the Fire Chief disagrees. The briefing also noted that 
a multitude of federal programs provide funding for interoperable 
communications with no coordination of requirements or guidance and 
that local funding was also stove-piped to meet individual agency 
needs. In a recent statement, we identified 10 separate grant programs 
that could be used for first responder equipment, including a number of 
these that can be used for interoperable communications equipment. We 
stated that the fragmented delivery of federal assistance can 
complicate coordination and integration of services and planning at 
state and local levels.[Footnote 14]

The Fundamental Barrier to Success: The Absence of Effective 
Coordinated Planning and Collaboration:

The barriers to successfully addressing the three challenges we have 
outlined are multifaceted. Among the organizations we have contacted or 
whose reports we have reviewed, we found a variety of identified 
barriers, with a number of common barriers. For example, the SAFECOM 
project and a task force of 18 national associations representing state 
and local elected and appointed officials and public safety 
officials[Footnote 15] identified similar barriers: (1) incompatible 
and aging communications equipment, (2) limited and fragmented funding, 
(3) limited and fragmented planning and cooperation, (4) limited and 
fragmented radio spectrum, and (5) limited equipment standards.

Of all these barriers, perhaps the most fundamental has been limited 
and fragmented planning and cooperation. The regional chairs of the 
Florida State Interoperability Committee have noted that non-technical 
barriers are the most important and difficult to solve. Police and fire 
departments often have different concepts and doctrines on how to 
operate an incident command post and use interoperable communications. 
Similarly, first responders, such as police and fire departments, may 
use different terminology to describe the same thing. Differences in 
terminology and operating procedures can lead to communications 
problems even where the participating public safety agencies share 
common communications equipment and spectrum.

No one first responder group, jurisdiction, or level of government can 
successfully address the challenges posed by the current state of 
interoperable communications. Effectively addressing these challenges 
requires the partnership, leadership, and collaboration of all first 
responder disciplines, jurisdictions, and levels of government--local, 
state, federal, and tribal. In the absence of that partnership and 
collaboration, we risk spending funds ineffectively and creating new 
problems in our attempt to resolve existing ones.

That concludes my statement, Mr. Chairmen, and I would be pleased to 
answer any questions you or other members of the Subcommittees may 
have.


FOOTNOTES

[1] Our work addresses public safety wireless communications 
interoperability issues. Thus, we do not address interoperability 
problems found in other homeland security functions, such as fire 
equipment, chem-bio equipment, and information technology.

[2] National Task Force on Interoperability, WHY CAN'T WE TALK? Working 
Together To Bridge the Communications Gap To Save Lives, February, 
2003.

[3] SAFECOM is one of the President's 24 E-GOV initiatives.

[4] The description of SAFECOM's mission is taken from the 
Administrator for E-government and IT, the Office of Management and 
Budget letter to the attendees of the SAFECOM, National Institute of 
Standards and Technology and National Institute of Justice Summit on 
Interoperable Communications For Public Safety.

[5] Third Annual Report to the President and the Congress of the 
Advisory Panel to Assess Domestic Response Capabilities for Terrorism 
Involving Weapons of Mass Destruction, December 15, 2001.

[6] Homeland Security Act, P.L. 107-296, section 2 (6).

[7] The Department of Justice and the Department of the Treasury formed 
the Public Safety Wireless Network Program (PSWN) to promote effective 
public safety communications and to foster interoperability among 
local, state, federal, and tribal communications systems. PSWN was 
incorporated into the new Department of Homeland Security as part of 
the SAFECOM project in 2003.

[8] The DOJ study concentrated on wireless interoperability issues 
within the state and local law enforcement community, while the PSWN 
study assessed communications interoperability issues within the fire 
and emergency medical services communities.

[9] Formed May 1, 1977, the National Public Safety Telecommunications 
Council is a federation representing public safety telecommunications. 
The purpose of NPSTC is to follow up on the recommendations of the 
Public Safety Wireless Advisory Committee (PSWAC). In addition, NPSTC 
acts as a resource and advocate for public safety telecommunications 
issues.

[10] Independent Task Force Sponsored by the Council on Foreign 
Relations; Emergency Responders: Drastically Underfunded, Dangerously 
Unprepared.

[11] The Association of Public-Safety Communications Officials, The 
APCO International Homeland Security White Paper, August 2002.

[12] TELECOMMUNICATIONS; Better Coordination and Enhanced 
Accountability Needed to Improve Spectrum Management, GAO-02-906, 
September, 2002

[13] TELECOMMUNICATIONS; Comprehensive Review of U.S. Spectrum 
Management With Broad Stakeholder Involvement Is Needed,GAO-03-277, 
January, 2003

[14] Homeland Security: Reforming Federal Grants to Better Meet 
Outstanding Needs, GAO-03-1146T, September 3, 2003

[15] National Task Force on Interoperability, WHY CAN'T WE TALK? 
Working Together To Bridge the Communications Gap To Save Lives, 
February, 2003.