In the 9/11 terror attacks, scores of firefighters were killed because they didn’t get the call to evacuate the World Trade Center’s twin towers before the buildings collapsed.
But just days before the 10th anniversary of the attacks, as the National Journal reports, lawmakers still have failed to approve a national broadband network to prevent future communications breakdowns among emergency responders.
The creation of such a wireless communications network for emergency services was a key recommendation of the 9/11 Commission. Yet lawmakers have yet to reach agreement on how to fund the system.
As Reuters has reported, a key point of contention has been whether to give a highly sought after spectrum of airwaves called the D-block directly to public safety groups, or to auction it to commercial carriers and require them to share it with first responders.
An auction could cover a good portion of the cost. As CNET reports, public safety officials say they need between $10 billion and $12 billion to build the network, and the government could earn an estimated $3.1 billion with an auction.
Pressure is building on Congress, however, to take action. “We’re not letting up. We’re not letting anybody off the hook,” said Sean Kirkendall, a spokesman for the Public Safety Alliance, a coalition of fire and police chiefs and other public safety officials.
Public safety officials this week have been meeting with lawmakers. They are trying to rally support for a bill by Senate Commerce Chairman Jay Rockefeller, D-W.Va., to allocate a chunk of the D-block for the public safety network and to authorize funding to build it.
Rockefeller, who had hoped to pass the legislation before Sunday’s 10th anniversary of the 2001 attacks, said last week that “implementing a national, interoperable radio system for our first responders is within our grasp. It will save lives all across the country, and we owe it to first responders to get it done.”
Yet even if the Senate passes the bill, it could stall in the House. Key Republicans on the House Energy and Commerce Committee, while in favor of a national public safety communications network, have insisted that the D-block spectrum be auctioned off to commercial bidders, as required under current law.
STUART SILVERSTEIN
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