Unless as otherwise provided, no person shall maintain, own,
erect, or construct any building or structure (or any part thereof)
or cause the same to be done which fails to support adequate radio
coverage for public safety entities including, but not limited to,
police officers, firefighters and EMS workers.
There shall be a minimum signal strength of -95 dBm available
in all areas of the building when transmitted from the agency's radio
system. For purposes of this section, 90% building coverage is considered
to be all areas of the building.
There shall be a minimum signal strength of -95 dBm received
by the agency's radio system when transmitted from all areas of the
building. For purposes of this section, 90% building coverage is considered
to be all areas of the building.
The agency shall maintain a document of technical information
specific to their requirements. This document shall contain (as a
minimum): the frequencies required, the location and effective radiated
power (ERP) of radio sites used by the in-building system, the maximum
propagation delay (in microseconds) and other supporting technical
information.
Buildings and structures which cannot support the required level
of radio coverage shall be equipped with a radiating cable system
and/or a distributed antenna system (DAS) with FCC-certified single
boosters (aka bidirectional amplifiers) or systems otherwise approved
by the agency in order to achieve the required adequate radio coverage.
The active components of the installed system or systems shall
be capable of operating on an independent battery system for a period
of at least 12 hours without external power input. The battery system
shall automatically charge in the presence of an external power input.
If used, signal boosters shall meet the following requirements
as well as any other requirements determined by the agency:
A. All signal booster components shall be contained in one NEMA4 type,
waterproof cabinet. Permanent external filters and attachments are
not permitted.
B. The battery system shall be contained in one NEMA4 type, waterproof
cabinet.
C. The system shall include automatic alarming of malfunctions of the
signal booster and battery system. Any resulting alarm shall be transmitted
to the agency's designated recipient by means specified by the agency
including, but not limited to, automatic standard telephone dial-up
circuit, TCP/IP network circuit, RS232 interface, etc.
D. FCC certification prior to installation. Pending FCC certification
is not acceptable.
E. All signal boosters must be compatible with both analog and digital
communications simultaneously at the time of installation. The agency
will provide the maximum acceptable propagation delay.
F. Only equipment that is preapproved by the agency may be used. This
section cannot be used by the agency to limit equipment to one manufacturer.
No amplification system capable of operating on frequencies
licensed to the agency by the FCC shall be installed without prior
coordination and approval of the agency. This is an FCC requirement.
Each owner shall submit at least one in-building coverage test:
A. Acceptance resting prior to occupancy of any newly constructed building.
B. Whenever structural changes occur (including additions to buildings)
that would materially change the original field performance tests.
D. When repairs or alterations are made to the amplification systems.
The performance test shall demonstrate that adequate radio coverage
is available in all required areas of the building. At the conclusion
of the testing, a report shall be submitted to the agency which shall
verify compliance with section NNN.1.
When an in-building radio system is required, it will be the
buildings owner's responsibility to have the radio system tested to
ensure that two-way coverage on each floor of the building is a minimum
of 90% upon completion of installation. Each floor of the building
shall be divided into a grid of approximately 20 equal areas. A maximum
of two nonadjacent areas will be allowed to fail the test. In the
event that three of the areas fail the test, the floor may be divided
into 40 equal areas in order to be more statistically accurate. A
maximum of four nonadjacent areas will be allowed to fail the test.
After the forty-area test, if the system continues to fail, it will
be the building owner's responsibility to have the system altered
to meet the 90% coverage requirement. The test shall be conducted
using a calibrated portable radio of the latest brand and model used
by the agency talking through the agency's radio communication system.
A test location approximately in the center of each grid area will
be selected for the test, then the radio will be enabled to verify
two-way communications to and from the outside of the building through
the agency's communication system. Once the test location has been
selected, prospecting for a better spot within the grid area will
not be permitted. The gain values of all amplifiers shall be measured
and the test measurement results shall be kept on file with the building
owner so the measurements can be verified each year during the annual
tests. In the event that the measurement results become lost, the
building owner will be required to rerun the acceptance test to reestablish
the gain values. As part of the installation, a spectrum analyzer
or other suitable test equipment shall be utilized to ensure spurious
oscillations are not being generated by the subject signal booster
due to coupling (lack of sufficient isolation) between the input and
output antenna systems. This test will be conducted at the time of
installation and subsequent annual inspections.
When an in-building radio system is required, it shall be the
building owner's responsibility to have all active components of the
system, such as signal boosters, power supplies, and backup batteries,
tested to a minimum of once every 12 months. Signal boosters shall
be tested to ensure that the gain is the same as it was upon initial
installation and acceptance. Backup batteries and power supplies shall
be tested under load of a period of one hour to verify that they will
properly operate during an actual power outage. If the battery exhibits
symptoms of failure within the one-hour test period in the opinion
of the agency's representative, the test shall be extended for additional
one-hour periods until the integrity of the battery can be determined.
All other active components shall be checked to determine that they
are operating within the manufacturers specifications for the intended
purposes.
Police and fire personnel shall at any time have the right to
enter onto the property to conduct its own field testing to be certain
that a required level of radio coverage is present.