Coast Guard expands wireless maritime 911 system

Coast Guard expands wireless maritime 911 system

The Coast Guard has expanded the coverage of its Rescue 21 wireless command-and-control system for port security and enhanced direction technology for maritime search and rescue in the New York and Delaware Bay areas.

Software problems initially delayed production of the high-tech network that is deployed on radio towers that dot the coastline and inland waterways. Those glitches have been resolved, says Coast Guard Capt. Mike Christian, and Rescue 21, built by General Dynamics C4 Systems in Scottsdale, Ariz., has entered full production.

Designed to replace the obsolete National Distress Response System built during the 1970s, the $730 million Rescue 21 system is being installed over the next few years and eventually will provide wireless communication along 95,000 miles of coastline and waterways.

Christian said the most significant challenge has been finding adequate radio tower space, because both the government and commercial sectors now compete for the best locations. The Coast Guard has found that it's much cheaper to rent tower space from cell phone providers than to build its own.

One of the most important features of Rescue 21 is its ability to plot the exact location of a rescue call. "It's amazing how many times we get calls from mariners who don't know where they are, or they don't have any navigation equipment, or they're lost in the fog," Christian said. Now, the Coast Guard can get a direct line of bearing on the caller and greatly speed rescue times.

Rescue 21 also allows archiving of the digital calls, and since many transmissions are garbled, they then can be digitally enhanced and deciphered.

While the contract requires the system to provide coverage out to 20 nautical miles and have the ability to pick up a 1-watt transmission from an antenna only 2 meters above sea level, Christian said most radios are 25-watt power and in some areas, the Coast Guard has been able to pick up calls from well over 100 miles out to sea.

In addition, the old system had a single channel, which meant the Coast Guard could monitor only one emergency call at a time. The Rescue 21 system provides four VHF channels and one UHF channel, and is interoperable with systems used by law enforcement and emergency first responders.

The direction technology also helps the Coast Guard weed out hoaxes, which Christian said comprise 15 percent of all calls. "When they call and say they're sinking, but the direction finding says they're on shore driving around in a pickup truck," he said, the Coast Guard doesn't deploy its aircraft and boats.

COMMENTS

  • Hopefully this takes care of the 3AM uncorrelated MAYDAY's we receive all the time. Maybe will lead to more prosecutions for hoaxes as well. One can only hope
  • Hopefully this takes care of the 3AM uncorrelated MAYDAY's we receive all the time. Maybe will lead to more prosecutions for hoaxes as well. One can only hope
  • The Coast Guard's "Rescue 21" system has sometimes been nicknamed "Mariner's 911" However, the call is made on maritime ship-to-shore radios which at 25 watts have a pretty good range. The Coast Guard maintains larger radio stations on shore to communicate with mariners in emergency and to help with information and navigation; they support the Rescue 21 function. One of Coast Guard's major missions is Search and Rescue, and the Rescue 21 system contributes to that.

CORRECTIONS: The original version of this story said the Coast Guard was expanding the coverage of its Rescue 21 system in the New York and Delaware Bay areas. That expansion already has occurred. It said the system cost $735 million; the correct figure is $730 million. The entire system will be installed over the next few years, not 14 months. And it provides four VHF channels and one UHF channel, not five VHF channels. The article has been updated to correct the errors.