Tuesday, March 27, 2007

Public has almost no access to new police radios

Public has almost no access to new police radios
By Blanca Cantu /
March 27, 2007







A new police and fire communications system designed to help emergency crews stay in touch also means the news media has less access to information about incidents affecting the public.

Abilene police and fire departments recently ditched an 18-year-old dispatch system for a new $14 million system that has better encryption capabilities and keeps many of the conversations people using police scanners are accustomed to hearing off the air. Police and fire officials began using the new system this month.

New radios purchased by the Reporter-News, KTXS-TV, KRBC-TV and KTAB-TV that can pick up transmissions from the new system were programmed by the city's communication services department. Abilene media can listen to a police and fire dispatch channel and eight tactical fire channels.

Before the city upgraded its communication system, the media and the public could hear police and dispatchers chatter on multiple channels. Now, the media has limited access - but the public has almost none. Traditional police scanners cannot pick up transmissions on the new system, meaning it must rely more on the media to report police and fire news at a time when less information is available to the media on police radios.

Jim Berry, assistant chief of the Abilene Police Department, said the media no longer has access to the police service channels because the department decided ''it's best for operations.'' Service channels are used when officers in the field ask dispatchers to make a call for them or check a license plate number.

Berry said the media's inaccessibility to the service channels helps the department comply with an agreement the department has with the Texas Department of Public Safety.

Information transmitted over the service channel can contain information extracted from DPS' Texas Law Enforcement Telecommunication system - and that is not public information, he said.

''As a law enforcement officer, I cannot provide you with any information that comes out of the TLET system,'' Berry said. ''Due to the nature of police operations, there is information and communications that you should not have access to.''

Berry, representatives of the fire department and the media met last year to discuss radio accessibility. Berry said in the interest of maintaining a good relationship with the media, the police department granted the media access to the primary dispatch channel for patrol.

''We felt like that would meet your needs,'' Berry said. The agreement was more than media in Wichita Falls initially received (see below).

At last year's meeting in Abilene, Scott Martin, chief photographer for KTXS, said he asked for more access. But his request was denied.

News director Iain Munro said KTXS would like to have access to all channels so that his staff can hear everything and judge things more clearly.

''The last thing we want to do is get in the way of the police force doing their job,'' Munro said.

The news station's photographers were concerned they wouldn't hear certain things, he said. Not hearing chatter over the scanner forces more calls to dispatchers, further tying up the lines of communication.

''We want to be able to cover the story and do it so we're not interfering with the police officers' jobs,'' Munro said.

Tom Vodak, news director for KRBC and KTAB, said the change in access to police and fire communications hasn't affected the stations' news coverage.

Is there a basis for complaints?

Joe Larsen, board member of the Freedom of Information Foundation of Texas, said media outlets can't argue for more access to police chatter on the basis of the Texas Public Information Act.

''Access has to rest on a statute or the Constitution,'' Larsen said. ''There is no statute that gives you access to a police scanner.''

When the Wichita Falls Police Department in 2005 upgraded from traditional police radios that many people could hear with a police scanner to the same digital radio system Abilene is using, it left the media and the public in the dark and denied them access to all police communication.

Two months later, the police department and the media in Wichita Falls came to an agreement that allowed the media to listen to fire and general police traffic, according to the Times Record News. The Times Record News is owned by The E.W. Scripps Company, parent company of the Reporter-News.

Abilene Assistant Police Chief Jim Berry said the decision to allow the media to listen in on police dispatch calls would be in the best interests of both the department and the media so that the good relationship they have established with each other could be maintained.

How do police communicate?

Abilene Police Department officers use about 25 ''talk groups'' when they use their radios to talk to each other. A combination of digital and traditional analog transmissions can be heard on police scanners.

Each police radio is programmed with a particular ''personality.'' Radio personalities have access to specific talk groups. Each channel on the dial represents different talk groups. Talk groups are accessible by officers in particular departments. For example, detectives in the Criminal Investigation Division have multiple talk groups that are not available to every police officer. Detectives, patrol officers and other divisions have their own groups.


Copyright 2007, Abilene Reporter News. All Rights Reserved.

© 1995-
20072003/2004 The E.W. Scripps Co. and the Abilene Reporter-News. All Rights Reserved.



0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home