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Initial Funding and Project
Timeline
Phase I included equipment upgrades to the ten tower sites
located in these 17 counties in Southeast Kansas. Upgrades resulted in
interoperability among users of these towers. This phase was operational by
July 2006.
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Allen
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Crawford
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Miami
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Anderson
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Elk
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Montgomery
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Bourbon
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Franklin
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Neosho
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Chautauqua
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Greenwood
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Wilson
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Cherokee
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Labette
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Woodson
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Coffey
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Linn
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Phase II, Group A includes equipment
upgrades to the thirteen tower sites located in the
following counties, of which most encompass the Kansas
Turnpike. This portion of the Phase II was operational
by July 2007.
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Butler
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Leavenworth
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Shawnee
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Chase
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Lyon
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Sumner
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Cowley
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Saline
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Wabaunsee
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Douglas
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Sedgwick
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Wyandotte
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Johnson
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Phase II, Group B will include equipment upgrades to seven
tower sites located mostly in Northeast Kansas in the
following counties. This portion of Phase II was operational
by July 2008.
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Atchison
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Marshall
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Pottawatomie
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Doniphan
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Nemaha
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Reno
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Finney
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Phase II, Group C will include equipment
upgrades to seven tower sites in South Central Kansas
located in the following counties. This portion of Phase
II was operational by July 2008.
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Barber
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Edwards
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Rice
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Barton
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Pratt
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Rush
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Comanche
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Funding for fully completing
the Statewide InterOperable Communications System has
not been identified. The State of Kansas has been seeking
more federal funds to help with this effort. As funding
becomes available, additional regions of the state will
be upgraded until the statewide system is completely
interoperable.
Project Description and Benefits
Implementing the Statewide InterOperable Communications
System involves switching from a conventional 800 MHz
analog radio system to an Astro P25 SmartZone digital
trunking system. One of the benefits of the SmartZone
trunked system is wide area coverage. Radio users no
longer have to switch the knob on the radio to go to
a different tower location, the radio will automatically
switch to whichever tower is emitting the strongest
signal.
One of the features of a trunked system
is the use of talkgroups. By using talkgroups, multiple
agencies can utilize the system while using less resources
than the conventional system. The repeaters at each
site are capable of handling multiple users simultaneously.
Users within an agency have the ability to talk to other
agency users from different tower sites across the state
because they will be in the same talkgroup. KDOT communcations
staff works with the individual agencies to establish
their talkgroups and program the radios.
Through the use of event channels
and mutual aid channels, radios users from different
agencies that do not have established daily communications
can now talk to each other. This enables interoperability.
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