
BAPCO 2011 to showcase lower cost incident management and emergency planningPublished on 14 Mar 2011
Arguably, the range and scale of present threats to business continuity and public safety has never been greater on the domestic and international level. At the more extreme level, the last few months alone have seen a range of extraordinary situations, with both national and global impact, from the rescue of the Chilean miners to the appalling devastation caused by the terrorist bomb in Moscow Domodedovo airport.
At the leading edge of technology, solutions and inter-agency thinking, BAPCO offers a unique insight into the future of integrated communication and information technologies designed to improve, plan and deliver public safety information communication and data services. The BAPCO conference and exhibition presents keynote speakers offering real life case studies, future-view information, support and solutions to the new challenges facing emergency planners and service delivery agencies. Day one of the conference opens with Sir Ken Knight CBE, HM Chief Inspector of Fire Services and Chief Fire & Rescue Adviser in England & Wales, who offers his experience and perspective on the fresh challenges facing the emergency services and civil contingency responders in dealing with major incidents. A programme of must-attend sessions for all communications officers and emergency planners follows over the two-day conference. The largest event ever held in the UK, the 2012 Olympics and Paralympics presents exceptional challenges and pressures in terms of technology, staffing, co-operation and resources for every authority and service actively engaged in the delivery of the event, as well as a key learning opportunity for all. Commander Richard Morris of the Metropolitan Police will provide a personal insight into the process and an overview of some of the challenges still to be met in planning for the 2012 Olympic Games. Continuing the 2012 Olympics theme, Kevin Taylor, Head of Olympic Communications Project, Metropolitan Police will examine the mechanics of secure and consistent radio communications for the Games, through process, approval, planning, testing and co-operation, concluding with a future look at the final stages of the project and the handover to business as usual. Kevin will welcome questions and debate following the presentation. Richard Bobbett, Chief Executive of Airwave has the task of delivering the first Games with its own private mobile radio service. This will be used by LOCOG (London Organising Committee of the Olympic and Paralympic Games) officials and volunteers, and will support 34 competition venues, just shy of 15,000 athletes, 20,000 media and press, and over 10 million ticket sales over a 44-day period. In addition, the system must ensure that the emergency services, which rely on the Airwave service every day, can continue to operate efficiently and effectively. The afternoon sessions cover a number of specific issues that must be understood and addressed in the current context, including the balance of maintaining mission critical front line services with cost reduction, and a practical presentation on the very present issue of cyber security from Edward Hamilton of Analysys Mason. Drawing on real life experience, this session provides an understanding of how the new threats differ from the threats of the past. Edward will offer practical input into the types of strategy delegates will need to consider for their own organisations. At the close of the day, Jeremy Kemp of PA Consulting draws on personal experience of managing large change projects in emergency control centres to take a hard-nosed look at structural and organisational change and the performance and budgetary benefits that can accrue. He will challenge delegates to apply radical thinking to their organisations and will take questions following the session.
With the recent removal of Fire Control from the purchasing process, this presentation will be of interest to all Fire and Rescue Services, as well as offering valuable learning for all delegates involved in the command and control system. Kieran Timms of Merseyside FRS offers an honest and illuminating picture of the journey from an underperforming and unstable command and control system, to an effective, efficient, new integrated network which reduced costs, improved user satisfaction and efficiency, and ultimately measurably reduced casualties. Duncan Swan of Analysys Mason then takes this to the next measure, with insights based on real situations into how cutting out inefficiency can deliver real ICT cost savings. This session also offers an illuminating view of how "green behaviour" can meet government requirements for improved energy and resource efficiency with an improved bottom line - and how to make it happen on the ground. In a key presentation on EU funded Project SECRICOM, Shaun O'Neill will give a comprehensive update on the tangible technical benefits achieved to date, in crisis and incident management, and future implications including enhanced interoperability across borders, and how extended capability for communications offers scope for cost reduction in future procurement.
Alert4All is another key EU funded project. Christina Parraga Nielia of the German Aerospace Centre and Graham Peters of Avanti Communications will offer a fascinating insight into how the project will deliver mass-market alert communications to consumer devices, and take a look at the social behaviour trends and media (including social networks) that must be understood in order to manage alert messaging via new media with such an enhanced range. In a complementary vein, a session entitled ‘Next Generation 999 - Managing multimedia incident information', Murray Barker of Nice Systems takes a future view of how forces can prepare for the next generation of inbound emergency communications, and its potential benefits. Running in tandem with the conference, as ever, the BAPCO exhibition offers delegates and visitors the chance to see and assess the future public safety communications systems, services and technologies that will shape operations, facilitate future inter-agency communication, save money on current and new lifetime projects, and help effective delivery, from over 100 leading suppliers. On the exhibition floor this year, visitors and delegates will see all the major suppliers of technologies, consultancy and solutions for their businesses, and also a number of new names and innovative services for 2011. First time exhibitors, Saadian will be exhibiting PagerSMS - a product that provides a unique SMS emergency alert system designed to reach key personnel during a crisis. PagerSMS delivers a text message with a distinctive alarm that rings continually until acknowledged by the recipient. Unlike traditional pagers, messages are two-way with delivery reports ensuring auditable results. Once a message is viewed, the system will automatically deliver a "viewed" receipt.
PagerSMS removes the need to carry two devices, thereby lowering costs and providing greater convenience to emergency response teams. A special pager SMS inbox is downloaded onto the phone to activate and store PagerSMS messages as they are received. Benefits for Crisis Response Management:
Deeside-based engineering company, Remsdaq Ltd's will be showcasing their added-value solution for station-end equipment that provides security, mobilising and asset management functionality in one neat wall mounted cabinet, together with a selection of their latest access control, security and mobilising applications and hardware. |
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