Located on the Kennebec River, the City of Augusta is the State Capital of Maine. It covers 59 square miles with a population of 18,500.
Augusta Public Safety Dispatch services Fire, Police and Emergency Medical Services. Augusta has mutual aid with neighboring communities and shares one of three sites with Maine State Police.
Download client story as a PDFThe City's 25-year-old analog network did not meet current Public Safety standards. Wayne McCamish, Retired Police Chief, explains: "The radio system left Public Safety workers in the Dark Ages. There were numerous locations where Police and Fire individuals were not able to communicate. This left major gaps in the flow of information and in requesting additional assistance."
To improve coverage in the urban and rural areas, the City replaced their network. Ralph St Pierre, Assistant City Manager, explains: "With Department of Homeland Security funding, we made a conscious effort to upgrade the City's communications to a digital radio network."
The new solution would provide:
The City of Augusta selected a three-site TaitNet P25 conventional simulcast network comprising:
The new network has two channels for Police tactical units and two for Fire teams. Ralph St Pierre describes the channel management practices: "Police and Fire use one channel for active and the other for incident. If there is an incident they will switch to the second channel and keep the first channel open."
"When we require mutual aid from neighboring communities we have a second alarm for emergencies. Volunteer firefighters from the area are not P25-compliant, so the Tait P25 system had to accommodate both analog and digital, which we were able to accomplish."
Jerry Vargas, Tait Senior Systems Engineer, elaborates: "From network design, project management, installation, commissioning and training, we made sure the city got the results they wanted."
Radio Consultant Ken Knight continues, "Tait engineers and project managers assigned to the project made a huge difference to the overall implementation of the radio network."
Coverage has substantially increased, according to Retired Police Chief Wayne McCamish: "The system cleared up the vast majority of places in the city, on the roads and in buildings where we had limited coverage. We now feel safer in providing services to the citizens of our city."
Ralph St Pierre explains, "Interoperability is the ultimate goal and we plan on connecting our system to Maine's state-wide system as it upgrades in the near future."