Public safety agencies grapple with loads of data flowing into command centers.
Bob Griffin doesn't worry that emergency responders won't have enough information should terrorist attacks hit Arlington County, Va., or Washington, D.C., the county's high-profile neighbor directly across the Potomac River.
Command centers like the one in Arlington can pull in more raw data than ever thanks to an increasingly wired world that features surveillance cameras on highway overpasses, biosensors, countywide geographic information system (GIS) maps and instantaneous voice communications.
But that's a cause for new concerns. A data flood might slow response times for emergency operations center (EOC) managers. "We're struggling over how to consolidate masses of information into usable nuggets," said Griffin, the county's director of emergency management. "It's just too much information sometimes."
He's not alone with such fears. Emergency response officials throughout the national capital region and elsewhere are grappling with ways to build a cohesive, central view of their jurisdictions, especially under the pressure and time constraints of an unfolding crisis situation.
Bob Freeman, program manager for the EOC run by Montgomery County, Md., which borders Washington, D.C., believes that if all of today's high-tech surveillance and monitoring equipment produce a hodgepodge of data, "we'll just create more silos of information," he said.
At the Washington, D.C., Metropolitan Police Department (MPD), the message is the same: Successful cross-departmental communication is a matter of officer safety, said Rai Howell, director of the Field Operations Support Unit.
New generations of technologies, including specialized Web portals and customized search engines, may ease data integration and bring order to incident responses.
Today's EOC
As technology evolves, command centers, the traditional headquarters of incident response, are also changing. Gone are the days of a basement room with a conference table, a collection of telephones and a few PCs.
Now, in the capital region and elsewhere, emergency-response commanders view information on computers supported by communications and networking technologies that combine to create a richer mix of data and promote agility.
"This isn't just a telephone world anymore," said Steve Hutchens, director of homeland security at systems integrator EDS. Instead, wireless phones, personal digital assistants, radio networks and video feeds facilitate emergency-response operations.
Several new commercial systems include:
"If sensors detect a chemical release around a city, they would send the information to a command center where the release point would be represented geospatially and the notation 'chlorine detected' would appear," for example, Tulkoff said.
Getting it together
For Arlington County, data assimilation begins with the standard IP network that officials launched last year. The network sends voice, data and video via a single communications pipeline. County officials also consolidated the 911 call center and EOC into a central emergency management department.
Now, if a homeland security emergency arises, the county can package disparate information for officials working at the tech-laden command center. Information includes GIS mapping data, surveillance camera video, feeds from commercial news organizations and voice communications from 911 dispatchers.
Griffin said the main tool for sorting information is the county's digital GIS maps. "We're trying to display the information as graphically as possible," he said. That ensures that people can use the data.
Fortunately, county officials haven't had to use their new EOC capabilities to respond to a terrorist attack. But they tested the gear in March when an anthrax scare occurred at the Pentagon. Arlington's emergency officials linked to an emergency command center in nearby Fairfax County, other federal public health agents and the Defense Department.
"The value is being able to create a baseline of understanding that everyone is working from," Griffin said. "Everyone's level of information can vary widely. When we're on the same page, we can better coordinate services and start to speak collectively. We can ask ourselves, 'If this really is anthrax, what do we do in the next two hours? The next four hours?' We create a team approach."
Meanwhile, Montgomery County officials moved the EOC from a facility in a basement to a new 5,000-square-foot facility engineered for information assimilation. Now, 13 departments can collaborate using computer displays that show digital maps, news feeds and IP-based voice and data communications.
In the past, county officials ran an EOC "with no rhyme or reason as to the commonality of it all," Freeman said. His mandate was to gather and centrally present cross-jurisdictional information. "The idea is to achieve interoperability not only within the county but with any other entity around us," Freeman said.
Interoperability doesn't rely on "Star Wars" technology, he added. The biggest stumbling blocks were cultural. County organizations "bought equipment from different vendors supporting different standards," he said. "It's been hard to get everyone to agree to share information."
For example, the local high schools operated video cameras for surveillance, but because the cameras were analog and the schools lacked up-to-date encoders, county officials couldn't share the video streams, an ability that could be useful in a crisis.
Freeman said he builds interdepartmental relationships that can aid interoperability when everyone buys compatible equipment. "I took the approach of knocking on doors and saying to people, 'I've got these problems. Let's partner up for the sake of an efficiently running EOC that may help everyone,' " he said.
Database integration
In fall 2001, MPD officials contracted Yellow House to develop Columbo so detectives could more easily search internal case management databases. Now, officers can gather data from the case management system while also checking information such as mug shots and arrest records.
"Information is what drives us," Howell said. Columbo usage statistics prove that point. During a 30-day period, detectives used the system to conduct 11,000 searches, she said.
Michael Schader, Yellow House's president, said Columbo didn't spring from a grand integration plan but developed piece by piece as MPD officials sought to incorporate additional information into the application.
Columbo consists of several traditional database management tools, including a data warehouse that centralizes information from separate databases. It also has an extract, transform and load program that converts data into common formats and removes redundancies and inaccuracies. Detectives can then view the data within graphical charts or maps.
"We measure Columbo's success in how much time it saves," Howell said. "Four years ago, detectives would have had to do hand searches for a lot of this kind of information, and that could have taken a full day or two. Now, we can get the same data in a matter of minutes."
Even with a foundation for collaboration in place, emergency-response officials know that technology is only as good as the people running it. In the end, training and expertise are crucial.
"We have to be careful that we don't fall into a PlayStation mentality where people are just watching a video screen," Griffin said. "We don't want them to forget what they've learned."
Joch is a business and technology writer based in New England. He can be reached at ajoch@monad.net.