LAPD Deploys Digital Mapping
from PlantCML to Locate Wireless Callers
Temecula, CA - Beginning January 12,
2006, callers making 9-1-1 calls on cellular or wireless
phones from selected carriers in Los Angles will be
connecting to an advanced call-processing system capable
of instantly displaying the location of the call, and
more, on a digital map.
As
part of a major equipment upgrade, the Los Angeles
Police Department Communications Division has
implemented ORION MapStar from PlantCML in the two major pubic safety answering points
(PSAPs) serving the Los Angeles metropolitan area and
the San Fernando Valley. The implementation of MapStar
allows the LAPD PSAPs to receive and process wireless
9-1-1 calls. In the past, wireless 9-1-1 calls were
automatically directed to the California Highway Patrol.
In non-traffic related incidents, the callers would be
transferred from the CHP call-centers to the appropriate
PSAP for assistance.
“Ten years ago the majority of calls made on wireless
phones to 9-1-1 were to report traffic incidents, while
most other types of emergencies were reported on
traditional wireline phones,” says Timothy J. Fuller,
president and CEO of PlantCML. “Today, People are using
wireless phones as their primary telephone, and they
assume they will have the same 9-1-1 service as with
their wireline telephone. That is only possible when a
wireless carrier can provide the location data (known as
Phase II), and the call-center equipment can display
that data on a viable 9-1-1 system. The Los Angeles
Police Department Communications dispatch centers now
have that capability.”
The ORION MapStar digital mapping solution from PlantCML is
designed to display the location of both wireline and
wireless calls. It can also provide routing information,
event filtering (for multiple calls reporting one
event), supplemental site information including building
footprints and related information such as HAZMAT on
site. Wireless calls made to 9-1-1 are presented with
call-location buffer rings to define the level of
accuracy. Call-takers can also use MapStar’s powerful
search engine to find addresses using aliases, structure
names, or intersections and streets by using phonetic
spellings.
“The digital mapping element to our
9-1-1 system expands our ability to process both
wireless and wireline calls with optimum efficiency,”
says Tim Riley, Chief Information Officer for LAPD
Communications. “We are now one of a select number of
agencies in the state that can process 9-1-1 wireless
calls. It is exciting for us and it will ultimately
provide an enhanced level of emergency services to the
public.”
The digital base maps are automatically updated daily to
ensure accuracy. The “enterprise” updates are
accomplished with ORION DataSync, an automatic software
delivery system from PlantCML. First tier maintenance for the
9-1-1 and mapping network is provided by PlantCML.
The two communications centers—which have the unique
capability to operate as one redundant PSAP--are
expected to be answering as many as 50,000 wireless
calls per month once all the area’s wireless carriers
are phased into the system. The centers currently
process approximately 36,000 wireline calls per month.
In order to accommodate the rising volume of calls, both
centers have recently installed new hardware PCs and
servers from Dell as well as updated 9-1-1 software from
PlantCML.
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PlantCML
Contact: Mage Hernandez
Marketing Communications Manager
(951) 719-2100
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