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r - <br /> method during the time period of 1500 to 2300, shows 71.0 new events arriving during the busier <br /> hour. A methodology, developed many years ago by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory of the <br /> University of California at Berkely (JPL) under a Law Enforcement Assistance Administration <br /> (LEAA) contract, that has been upgraded over time and has proven to be accurate, indicates that <br /> for the dispatch operation in use for law enforcement in Anoka County, a dispatcher and radio <br /> channel are busy when 33 new events arrive in an hour. In the 1500 to 2300 timeframe each day <br /> there are two channels and two dispatchers available to serve law enforcement needs in Anoka <br /> County and they would become saturated when more than 66 new events arrive in an hour. This <br /> 66 new event per hour figure assumes that the dispatching is evenly balanced between the two <br /> dispatch operators and that the dispatch operators only serve people in the field for dispatching <br /> functions and do not provide response to information inquiries and do not answer inbound 9 -1 -1 <br /> telephone calls. Since it is impossible to keep some extraneous activities out of dispatcher <br /> involvement and since it is impossible to exactly balance load, the actual load per dispatcher is <br /> somewhat less than 33; perhaps in the neighborhood of 30 new events (60 new events for two <br /> dispatchers). Since busier hour shows in 1999 a likelihood of 71 new events arriving during <br /> busier hour, the analytical analysis supports the empirical data provided by law enforcement <br /> questionnaire responders indicating that there is channel congestion. <br /> The congestion situation is even more serious in the 0700 to 1100 timeframe. During that time, <br /> the mean plus three standard deviation figure indicates that during busier hour of July of 1999, <br /> 45.9 new events would arrive. During that period of 0700 to 1100, there is only one law <br /> enforcement dispatcher on duty in Anoka County. As indicated previously, if that dispatcher <br /> does nothing but handle dispatch radio operations, the dispatcher can handle up to 33 new events <br /> arriving per hour during busier hour before dispatcher and channel saturation occur. Since 46 <br /> new events arrive during busier hour in July of 1999, it is clear that the analytical data supports <br /> the empirical indications that there is substantial channel congestion during the period 0700 to <br /> 1100. <br /> Anoka County should immediately begin to have a second dispatcher providing radio operator <br /> service to the law enforcement officers on both main dispatch channels 24 hours a day, including <br /> the period of 0300 to 1100. In addition, a third law enforcement radio operator dispatcher is <br /> required during the time period of 1500 to 2300 every day. In addition to a third dispatcher, a <br /> third law enforcement radio dispatch channel is required because when the dispatcher is busy the <br /> radio channel is busy and, therefore, a third dispatcher will need a third main dispatch channel. <br /> 2.5 BACK -UP RADIO FACILITIES <br /> Each of the main radio channels (the south and north main law enforcement channel, the law <br /> enforcement information channel and the county -wide fire channel) have back -up radio facilities. <br /> With the exception of the south main dispatch channel, however, the coverage performance will <br /> be even poorer than the talk -out performance from the primary sites. This should be viewed with <br /> concern, particularly because of the volume of radio traffic that needs to be carried. Back -up <br /> Ronald Vegemast Engineering, Inc. - Report: Anoka County <br />