Utah Successfully Monitored Athletes at Winter Games with Satellites; State Converts CompassCom's Tracking System to Public Safety Use.Business Editors & Technology Writers CENTENNIAL, Colo.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--March 7, 2002 Security personnel in Utah relied on satellites to monitor the locations of more than 400 vans carrying athletes to and from venues at the recently completed winter games. Utah officials are now converting this GPS-based Automatic Vehicle Location See mobile positioning. (AVL (Automatic Vehicle Location) See mobile positioning. ) system for everyday use in tracking emergency services vehicles throughout the state. The Utah Highway Patrol (UHP UHP Université Henri Poincaré (French: Henri Poincaré University) UHP Ultra-High Performance (projector lamps) UHP Ultra High Pressure (waterjet) UHP Utah Highway Patrol ) and Valley Emergency Communications Center An Emergency Communications Center, or ECC, is the nerve center of an area's emergency services. Resources in the field communicate, often via radio, mobile data terminal, or mobile phone, to dispatchers who then effectively manage the emergency resources for the area. (VECC VECC Vancouver East Cultural Centre ) near Salt Lake City purchased the AVL system from CompassCom Inc. of Centennial, Colo., last spring in preparation for the games. They chose the CompassCom CompassTrac(TM) system because it simultaneously tracks thousands of vehicles, differentiates multiple fleets and uses the AT&T Wireless CDPD (Cellular Digital Packet Data) A low-speed, digital, wireless data network that is an enhancement to an existing analog cellular network. Based on IBM's CelluPlan II, CDPD provides a packet overlay onto the AMPS network and moves data at 19. (Cellular Digital Packet Data (communications, protocol) Cellular Digital Packet Data - (CDPD) A wireless standard providing two-way, 19.2 kbps packet data transmission over exisiting cellular telephone channels. ) network. Personnel equipped each of the athlete shuttle vans with a combined GPS receiver and CDPD wireless modem unit, manufactured by TechnoCom and Sierra Wireless. GPS satellites in space enabled each receiver to pinpoint the precise location of the vehicle in which it was installed. This location information was transmitted via wireless modem on the AT&T network to a central security center where a computerized map screen displayed each vehicle's location, heading and speed. "It was great," said Sgt. Dan Catlin, Traffic and Transit Commander at the games. "At any given time, we were watching 250 vehicles and if any one strayed off course, we knew it immediately." Shuttle buses carrying athletes were assigned specific routes, which were programmed into the CompassCom CompassTrac map display. Any deviation from this route triggered an alarm at the security center. Each van was also outfitted with panic buttons to allow drivers to notify dispatch of any incident effecting athlete safety. By viewing the AVL map display, security personnel could immediately find the vehicle involved and determine its location to within 10 meters. "We didn't have any security incidents, but there were several times when drivers got lost and we radioed route instructions to them," said Catlin. Now that the games are concluded, the CompassCom system will remain in place to manage the daily dispatching of 19 public safety organizations operating in the Wasatch Valley. UHP and VECC personnel are removing the wireless modems from the shuttle vans and installing them in police cars, ambulances and fire trucks. "In public safety applications, AVL provides an additional safety dimension that benefits both emergency personnel and the public as Homeland Security becomes a key focus for our country," said Brant Howard, CompassCom President. UHP and VECC will equip their dispatch centers with AVL map screens where the incoming vehicle location information will be displayed on the CompassTrac map display. Dispatchers will see where police, fire and rescue vehicles are located throughout the Wasatch Front Range and immediately determine which vehicle is best able to respond to an emergency call. CompassCom was established in 1994 as a product and service provider for Global Positioning System Global Positioning System: see navigation satellite. Global Positioning System (GPS) Precise satellite-based navigation and location system originally developed for U.S. military use. (GPS), Geographic Information System geographic information system (GIS) Computerized system that relates and displays data collected from a geographic entity in the form of a map. The ability of GIS to overlay existing data with new information and display it in colour on a computer screen is used primarily to (GIS), and Automatic Vehicle Location (AVL) markets. CompassCom offers complete GPS and GIS solutions as a business partner with Trimble Navigation, ESRI (Environmental Systems Research Institute, Inc., Redlands, CA, www.esri.com) The world's leading developer of geographic information systems (GIS) software, including programs that plot ZIP codes and addresses, demographic information and detailed, color-coded data. Inc., TechnoCom, Sierra Wireless and AT&T Wireless. Sample map graphics are available by contacting Lisa Kingston at 303/456-5690. |
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