November/December 2003
CAD and ITS Working in Concert
by K. Craig Allred
Field tests are integrating advanced traffic management systems
with computer-aided dispatch systems to provide real-time information
that can improve public safety.
The computer-aided dispatch (CAD) systems used by law enforcement
and other emergency response agencies provide dispatchers and response
units with real-time information on road incidents. These public safety
systems typically track data on assignments to response units, locations
of crashes, equipment locations and statuses, utility locations, and
special hazards. If CAD systems and Intelligent Transportation Systems
(ITS) could work together, public safety agencies would have instant
access to real-time information on traffic and road conditions. Emergency
responders would reach incident scenes more quickly and manage the responses
more efficiently. By the same token, transportation agencies could use
real-time information from CAD systems to manage the traffic-related
effects of emergencies more efficiently.
 |
A staff member with the
Utah Department of Public Safety operates the advanced traffic management
system. Photo: Derek Smith. |
Most existing CAD systems are proprietary, however, and are not designed
to exchange information with CAD systems offered by other vendors, let
alone with ITS technologies. Variations in formats and protocols for
data exchange and messaging pose additional challenges, as do different
system standards in the transportation and public safety communities.
To address these challenges, the U.S. Department of Transportation
(USDOT) recently launched two projects to demonstrate that the technical
and institutional barriers to integration of public safety and transportation
systems can be overcome. The USDOT ITS Public Safety Program funded
the two new field operational tests—one in Salt Lake City, UT,
and one in Seattle, WA—to establish the feasibility and benefits
of integrating public safety CAD systems with the advanced traffic management
systems (ATMS) already used by transportation agencies as part of their
ITS deployments.
 |
| The Traffic Operations
Center at the Utah Department of Transportation. Photo: Derek Smith. |
The timing could not be better, since many State and local public safety
agencies are planning long-needed upgrades for their CAD systems in
anticipation of funding for homeland security.
“We are delighted to have the opportunity to work on a project
of such national significance,” says Richard Manser, interim
ITS director with the Utah Department of Transportation (UDOT). “These
technologies have the potential to improve public safety and security
significantly through real-time sharing of incident-related information
between public safety and transportation agencies.”
 |
| The Valley Emergency Communications
Center in Salt Lake County, UT. |
Utah's Advanced Traffic Management System
In Utah, the State transportation agency already had integrated its
CommuterLink advanced traffic management system with the Utah Department
of Public Safety's CAD system in a test mode. The State will
use USDOT funding to expand this integration to include several other
CAD systems in the Salt Lake Valley. The major aim of the Utah project
is to define and develop a common message set that can be easily integrated
by CAD vendors without affecting their proprietary products or other
sensitive information.
This level of integration will require an unprecedented degree of
collaboration among several independent CAD vendors. The project also
will mark the first time that integration and electronic transfer of
data have linked such a wide variety of emergency management centers
with a statewide traffic management center.
“UDOT and the Utah Department of Public Safety have been working
across organizational boundaries for years and are setting a great example
of partnering,” says John Njord, UDOT's executive director.
“This contract will allow us to take our past experience, build
upon it, and share the results with the rest of the country.”
Utah Integrates Four CAD Platforms
Utah will build on the solid, existing institutional relationships
among public safety and transportation agencies in the Salt Lake City
region to share a wide range of technologies for emergency response
and traffic management. In addition to UDOT and the Utah Department
of Public Safety, partners in the Utah project include the Valley Emergency
Communications Center in Salt Lake County, the Salt Lake City Fire Department,
the Salt Lake City Police Department, the Utah Transit Authority, four
CAD vendors that provided the legacy systems used by the project partners,
and TransCore—the UDOT contractor for systems management and
integration.
Utah's CAD/ITS system includes four major components. The first
is enhanced message/data set functionality. The originating
agency will be able to select which agencies receive shared data messages.
Agencies will be able to update or create incident records automatically
using the shared data. Development of the message sets will be based
on the most recent Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers'
(IEEE) 1512 standards. Other transportation and public safety agencies
around the country may want to use these systems at some point.ÊFor
this reason, the message sets will be designed with open architecture
that will allow for easy interface with other proprietaryÊsystems.
The second major component is automated vehicle location integration.
The integrated CAD/ITS system will provide several tools to help the
partners improve their daily operation. Automated vehicle location enables
transportation and public safety agencies to track the locations of
their response units. Integrating and sharing automated vehicle location
data will provide benefits to dispatch agencies, such as being able
to convey the locations of snowplows to all field units concerned with
roadway conditions.
Coupled closely with automatic vehicle location, geographic information
system capability will provide dispatching agencies with real-time
information for route guidance, estimation of arrivals, and identification
of the response units closest to the location in need. Transportation
operations managers can use the same information for incident tracking
and managing incident severities.
The final major component is CAD-to-CAD and CAD-to-ATMS
infrastructure. Upon completion of the Utah field operational tests,
dispatchers and UDOT operations personnel will be able to send messages
and incident status updates to one another with a simple click of the
mouse. This automatic and seamless operation will eliminate the need
to reenter data. All users will have access to more incident information
and will be able to retrieve it more quickly. In the emergency management
world, this access translates to saved lives, time, and money, and reduced
traffic delay.
Washington Explores CAD Integration
The Washington State Patrol's upgraded CAD system, scheduled
for initial installation in July 2003, will be integrated with the Washington
State Department of Transportation's (WSDOT) Internet-based secure
data network. The WSDOT network enables State, regional, and local agencies
to share information about road incidents, weather conditions, traffic
delays, and other situations. A key goal is to demonstrate how open
communication between the law enforcement and transportation agencies
can improve emergency response and dissemination of traveler information
without placing additional burdens on the already-busy emergency response
and radio dispatch staffs.
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| Traffic exits
SR99 in downtown Seattle, WA. |
“This is a great opportunity for the [State] Department of Transportation
and Washington State Patrol to work together to improve roadway condition
reports for the traveling public,” says Washington State Transportation
Secretary Doug MacDonald. “Consistent and timely information
delivered through our traveler information systems will help save lives
and make the most efficient use of our highways.”
USDOT and DOJ Joint Initiative
USDOT is coordinating with the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ),
which has several programs related to cross-agency and cross-jurisdictional
integration of CAD and records management systems (RMS). The goal
is to facilitate the cross-agency and cross-jurisdictional integration
of ITS, CAD, and RMS systems.
- DOJ Office of Justice Programs Justice Extensible Markup
Language Initiative. This data-sharing initiative explores
information sharing and technology integration in the justice
and public safety communities. USDOT is working with the Department
of Justice to coordinate with ongoing extensible markup language
activities in the transportation community. For more information
on this initiative, go to http://it.ojp.gov.
- Interoperability Strategies for Public Safety (AGILE).
Sponsored by DOJ's National Institute of Justice, AGILE's
mission is “to assist State and local law enforcement
agencies to effectively and efficiently communicate with one
another across agency and jurisdictional boundaries.”
For more information, visit www.agileprogram.org.
- National Institute of Justice Communications Interoperability
and Information Sharing Publications. The National Institute
of Justice publishes and identifies research reports, research
summaries, guides, and other documents for practitioners, policymakers,
and researchers interested in communications interoperability
and information sharing. For more information, visit http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/nij/sciencetech/ciis_pub.htm.
|
Washington System Is Internet-Based
State patrol dispatchers throughout Washington State will share a
common platform for the first time when the Washington State Patrol's
upgraded CAD system goes online. The newly procured CAD system, which
will output information using a universal data transfer capability,
will be pilot-tested in one region before going statewide.
The Condition Acquisition and Reporting System (CARS) is an Internet-based
system that enables State, local, and regional agencies to collect and
share information on road incidents, weather conditions, traffic delays,
and other situations. The acquisition and reporting system is based
on ITS standards and exchanges data using Extensible Markup Language
(or XML). Data from the acquisition and reporting system are used to
coordinate roadway response; they also supply a portion of the traveler
information content in WSDOT's 511 travel information system
and Internet pages. Created by CastleRock Consultants, a partner in
the USDOT project, the acquisition and reporting system is used as the
basis for reporting 511 travel information by eight States in addition
to Washington.
 |
| A traffic operations
specialist monitors traffic in the Seattle Traffic System Management
Center. |
WSDOT plans to integrate CARS with the State patrol's CAD system
by creating new systems-integration software with three components.
The first component, Primary Alert, is a computer-based interface
from the Washington State Patrol to WSDOT. The direct line ensures that
a filtered report will appear in the WSDOT CARS within a minute of a
transfer from the CAD system. The report will include onscreen map displays
of the incident. The filters will ensure that the law enforcement agency
releases only necessary and appropriate information to the transportation
agency to address privacy and security concerns.
Response Support is the second component of the software.
The information provided will help Washington State Patrol dispatchers
ensure the most efficient response to the incident location. On a separate
Web page that is linked to the State patrol's CAD system, troopers
can find information about traffic, construction, or adverse weather
conditions that could affect their response.
The final component, Secondary Alert, is a direct computer-based
interface to secondary responders. Secondary Alert will reach, among
others, emergency medical services, towing and recovery service providers,
and utility companies. Secondary Alert will transfer incident information
to responders about events in the State patrol CAD system and the WSDOT
CARS. The Skagit County emergency medical service is partnering with
WSDOT and the Washington State Patrol in the USDOT project. Towing and
recovery services already are integrated into incident-response operations
through a three-party agreement with WSDOT and the Washington State
Patrol.
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| Early-morning
rush hour traffic on Interstate 5 looking south toward downtown
Seattle from the overpass on NE 45th Street. |
USDOT Supports Other Integration Efforts
In addition to the CAD/ITS field operational tests, the USDOT ITS
Public Safety Program is supporting several other activities to promote
the integration of ITS with public safety CAD systems.
- IEEE Standard 1512, Standard for Common Incident Management
Message Sets for Use by Emergency Management Centers, provides a common
set of automated messaging standards for exchanging vital data concisely,
unambiguously, and rapidly. The standard addresses messages related
to an emergency incident that are shared among the communications
centers of various agencies. The standard is carefully tailored to
allow a wide range of local variation in implementation, consistent
with the National Intelligent Transportation System Architecture.
For more information, visit www.its-standards.net/Documents/FSP1512_r2.pdf.
- National Transportation Communications for ITS Protocol (NTCIPª).
NTCIP is a standardization project funded by FHWA and involving several
standards-setting organizations. The project enables electronic traffic-control
equipment developed by different manufacturers to operate with one
another as a system to reduce the need for reliance on specific equipment
vendors and customized one-of-a-kind software. For more information,
visit www.ntcip.org.
- National Fire Protection Agency (NFPA) 1221 Standard for the
Installation, Maintenance, and Use of Emergency Services Communications
Systems (NFPA 1221). As a result of USDOT involvement in the
ongoing development of this standard, a requirement has been added
to the 2002 edition of NFPA 1221 to support automated information
exchange between public safety and transportation information systems.
The 2002 edition also provides updated information on call-taking
and processing, and outlines requirements for portable and mobile
radio capabilities. For more information, visit www.nfpa.org/catalog/product.asp?pid=122102&scr=nfpa&cookie%5Ftest=1.
- Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE) Advanced Traveler Information
System (ATIS) Standard J2354. Completed activities include developing
XML versions of the standards; building a demonstration model of a
multistate, multimodal traveler information system that gathers information
from several sources and then provides the information to the public
and other agencies in a common, consistent format; and providing information
about Federal travel information standards to State and local agencies.
For more information, visit www.sae.org.
The more that Federal, State, and local agencies can learn from these
projects—even those with older systems—the more quickly
barriers to integration will fall. As integration becomes more widespread,
the public's health and safety will have one more vital safeguard.
K. Craig Allred is the ITS public safety program coordinator
in the USDOT ITS Joint Program Office of the Federal Highway Administration
(FHWA) in Washington, DC.
For more information on the integration of CAD and ITS, visit
www.itspublicsafety.net.
Other Articles in this issue:
Getting Ahead of the Curve
Laying the Groundwork for Fast Bridge Construction
Cracked Girders
CAD and ITS Working in Concert
Responding to an Earthquake
A Fix for Aluminum Overheads
Composites Add Longevity to Bridges
The Public: Key to Successful Projects
511 — It's Happening!