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State and Local Emergency Needs: Standards, Training, Exercises, Strategic Planning, and New Infrastructure Requirements STANDARDS Dan Bart, TIA Co-Chair ANSI HSSP December 13, 2005
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Transcript of State and Local Emergency Needs: Standards, Training, Exercises, Strategic Planning, and New...

Page 1: State and Local Emergency Needs: Standards, Training, Exercises, Strategic Planning, and New Infrastructure Requirements STANDARDS Dan Bart, TIA Co-Chair.

State and Local Emergency Needs Standards Training Exercises Strategic

Planning and New Infrastructure Requirements

STANDARDSDan Bart TIA

Co-Chair ANSI HSSPDecember 13 2005

2

Presentation Overview

Standards Portfolio at DHS SampT

ANSI Homeland Security Standards Panel (ANSI HSSP)

TIA Standards in Support of HS and Emergency Communications

3

Standards at DHS SampT Standards MISSION

ndash Building confidence in homeland security technologies products services personnel and systems

Develop and coordinate the adoption of national standards and appropriate evaluation methods to meet homeland security mission needsndash 1048707 Requirements Developmentndash 1048707 Standards Development and Adoptionndash 1048707 Testing and Evaluation ndash Test Method Validationndash 1048707 Conformity Assessment ndash Compliance Testingndash 1048707 Coordination with Federal state local government

private sector and international standards community

4

DHS Standards DHS lacks statutory authority to issue

standards except in limited legacy programs ndash Coast Guard marine safety equipment

Public Law 104-113 (1995) - National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act (NTTAA) directs that agencies will use voluntary consensus standards

DHS will leverage expertise and resources of its partners at NIST and in the private sector standards communities to develop voluntary consensus standards

5

DHS Multiple Layers of StandardsRequirements

High visibility interagency issues (cyber security communications biometrics)

Cross-cutting issues within the new Department (emergency preparedness first responder equipment risk assessment)

Infrastructure support for standards for components (data standards cyber for CIO mission support Coast Guard FEMA TSA Secret Service)

6

DHS Strategic Partners for Standards

Interagency Agreement with National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST)

Coordinationcollaboration with specific agenciesndash DOE for RadNuc Countermeasures

ndash DOD CDC USDA FDA EPA for bio countermeasures

ndash DOJFBI DOS for biometrics

Alliance with American National Standards Institute (ANSI HSSP) and 300 + Standards Development Organizations (SDOs)ndash WWWANSIORGHSSP

ndash WWWHSSDUS

Standards Portfolio

Cyber

Emergency Preparedness and Response

Chemical Countermeasures

Biological Countermeasures

Radiological amp Nuclear

Countermeasures

High Explosives Countermeasures

Conformity Assessment

Incident Management

Communications

Training

Personal Protective Equipment

Urban Search and Rescue Robots

Geospatial Information Standards

Threats

Borders amp Transportation

Biometrics

RFID

X-Ray

Customs

Information Analysis and Infrastructure

Protection

Modeling Simulation and

Analysis

Heating Ventilation and Air

Conditioning

Sensors

Structures

8

Number of standards in ANSI HSSD 6500Number of standards adopted by DHS 14

HSSD entries by SDO

ASTM 223ASME 4

ASHRAE 38IEEE 75AOAC 0UL 22

NFPA 131TIA 11

9

Homeland Security Standards Database wwwhssdus

Update on Activities of the ANSI Homeland Security

Standards Panel

11

Background Standards Coordination Needed

The National Strategy for Homeland Security (2002) identified the need for standards to support homeland security (HS) and emergency preparedness ndash Fourteen critical infrastructure areas were noted

January 2 2003 Report for Congress stated ndash ldquoNeither the federal government nor the nongovernmental

sector presently has a comprehensive consolidated program for developing new preparedness standardsrdquo

12

Response ANSI-HSSP February 5 2003 Formation of ANSI-HSSP

announced Facilitate the identification of existing and

development and enhancement of new homeland security standards

Examine role for conformity assessment activities

Serve as privatepublic sector forum for standards issues that cut cross-sector ndash A partnership Co-Chairs provided by industry and government

13

ANSI-HSSP Structure Led by ANSI-HSSP Co-Chairs Steering Committeendash Comprised of Government Agencies ANSI SDOs non-

ANSI SDOs and Companies (ANSI members and non-ANSI)

ndash Acts as US TAG to ISO SAG

Full Panel Approximately 100 organizational participants

Workshops utilized to address specific HS standards areas

14

ANSI-HSSP Participation Participation on the HSSP is open to all affected

interests (ANSI and non-ANSI members) includingndash Federal State and Local governmentsndash Industry representativesndash Trade Associations and Professional Societiesndash Standards Developers (ANSI and non-ANSI)ndash ForaConsortiandash Academiandash Consumer interests

15

Activities since Plenary in 2004 A plenary meeting was held September 2005 Published final report from workshop on Biological and

Chemical Threat Agents Launched workshop on standardization for Enterprise Power

Security and Continuity Launched workshop on Perimeter Security standardization Held final meeting of the workshop on standardization for

Training Programs for First Response to WMD events ANSI completed the Homeland Security Standards Database

(HSSD) which includes input from previous HSSP workshops convened

Partner with homeland security efforts such as DHS National Preparedness Month NCSP NGATS Security IPT etc

16

ANSI-HSSP Activities Going Forward

Emergency Communications workshop to meet December 14 and 15 at NIST Gaithersburgndash October meeting cancelled due to Katrina

Final report of Training Programs workshop being finalized

Task groups working in Power Security and Perimeter Security areas

Steering Committee to provide input to ISOIEC Strategic Advisory Group (SAG) on Security

Continue to examine potential new areas for workshops

17

Types of Emergency Communications

IndividualOrganization-to-IndividualOrganization ndash A citizen communicating an emergency to another citizen or private organization via available options

[eg ON-STAR-like message amateur radio mobile and land-line communications (eg CMRS FRS GMRS CB etc) broadcast and mass media Internet email lists faxes information services and word of mouth] Includes employer-to-employee and employer-to-employer emergency communications

ndash Includes Employer-to-Employee and Employer-to-Employer

IndividualOrganization-to-Governmentndash A citizen communicating an emergency message to appropriate authorities via available options (eg E9-

1-11-1-2 call to Public Safety Answering Point (PSAP) call to HSOC amateur radio and mobile communications (with or without location services)

Government-to-IndividualOrganizationndash Government or authorized officials communicating alerts or details of an emergency to citizens via

available options (eg Governmental mass media alerts citizen accessible radio services and common channels highway alerts voluntary citizen alert services [localized and national] e-mailvoice-mail and word of mouth)

Government-to-Government ndash Governmental authorities communicating to each other other agencies and appropriate National

Security Emergency Preparedness (NSEP)-designated private industry concerns and coordinators (ie using all forms of telecommunications services private radio Commercial Mobile Radio Services (CMRS) e-mailmessaging alerts etc)

18

WWWTIAONLINEORG

19

Introduction to TIA

Trade organization and Standards Development Organization (SDO) serving the communications and information technology industry

Three primary activitiesndash Standards developmentndash Trade shows marketingndash Global public policy

20

Introduction to TIA TIA is accredited by the American National Standards

Institute (ANSI) as a Standards Development Organization (SDO)

The 5th largest ANSI SDO measured by number of American National Standards

Over 1000 published specifications and standards TIA standards activities began in the 1920rsquos

ndash One Committee TR-8 meeting continuously since 1944

ndash This Committee works on interoperability standards for Public Safety users narrowband wideband and broadband

21

TIA HS Leadership Sector Coordinator PDD-63

and HSPD-7 Member NCC ISAC Steering Committee of

Comm SCC Sector Lead to PCIS and

Secretary Treasurer of PCIS Co-Chair ANSI HSSP Advisory Committee of

National Public Safety Telecommunications Council (NPSTC)

Participate on WGs of NSTAC and NIAC

Steering Committee of NCSP

Participate in DOCNTIA Economic Security WG

Executive Board of NIUSR Advisory Committee of

DHS SAFECOM FCC PS National

Coordination Committee (NCC)

FCC NRIC

22

TIA HS Standards Project 25 and MESA

ndash Mobility for Emergency and Safety Applications

ndash Narrowband wideband and broadband

cdma2000reg standards for IMT-2000

Wireless Priority Service (WPS)

Lawfully Authorized Electronic Surveillance (LAES)ndash Lead SDO supporting

CALEA

E-911 and Location-based standards

Terrestrial Mobile Multimedia Multicast (TM3)

NSTAC NGN for NSEP IPoS VoIP xxoIP Support for Gig-E

Networks

23

WWWTIAONLINEORGCIP

THANK YOU

Contacts Dan Bartdbarttiaonlineorg+17039077703

ANSI HSSP Matt Deanemdeaneansiorg

  • State and Local Emergency Needs Standards Training Exercises Strategic Planning and New Infrastructure Requirements STANDARDS Dan Bart TIA Co-Chair ANSI HSSP December 13 2005
  • Slide 7
  • Update on Activities of the ANSI Homeland Security Standards Panel
  • THANK YOU Contacts Dan Bart dbarttiaonlineorg +17039077703 ANSI HSSP Matt Deane mdeaneansiorg
Page 2: State and Local Emergency Needs: Standards, Training, Exercises, Strategic Planning, and New Infrastructure Requirements STANDARDS Dan Bart, TIA Co-Chair.

2

Presentation Overview

Standards Portfolio at DHS SampT

ANSI Homeland Security Standards Panel (ANSI HSSP)

TIA Standards in Support of HS and Emergency Communications

3

Standards at DHS SampT Standards MISSION

ndash Building confidence in homeland security technologies products services personnel and systems

Develop and coordinate the adoption of national standards and appropriate evaluation methods to meet homeland security mission needsndash 1048707 Requirements Developmentndash 1048707 Standards Development and Adoptionndash 1048707 Testing and Evaluation ndash Test Method Validationndash 1048707 Conformity Assessment ndash Compliance Testingndash 1048707 Coordination with Federal state local government

private sector and international standards community

4

DHS Standards DHS lacks statutory authority to issue

standards except in limited legacy programs ndash Coast Guard marine safety equipment

Public Law 104-113 (1995) - National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act (NTTAA) directs that agencies will use voluntary consensus standards

DHS will leverage expertise and resources of its partners at NIST and in the private sector standards communities to develop voluntary consensus standards

5

DHS Multiple Layers of StandardsRequirements

High visibility interagency issues (cyber security communications biometrics)

Cross-cutting issues within the new Department (emergency preparedness first responder equipment risk assessment)

Infrastructure support for standards for components (data standards cyber for CIO mission support Coast Guard FEMA TSA Secret Service)

6

DHS Strategic Partners for Standards

Interagency Agreement with National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST)

Coordinationcollaboration with specific agenciesndash DOE for RadNuc Countermeasures

ndash DOD CDC USDA FDA EPA for bio countermeasures

ndash DOJFBI DOS for biometrics

Alliance with American National Standards Institute (ANSI HSSP) and 300 + Standards Development Organizations (SDOs)ndash WWWANSIORGHSSP

ndash WWWHSSDUS

Standards Portfolio

Cyber

Emergency Preparedness and Response

Chemical Countermeasures

Biological Countermeasures

Radiological amp Nuclear

Countermeasures

High Explosives Countermeasures

Conformity Assessment

Incident Management

Communications

Training

Personal Protective Equipment

Urban Search and Rescue Robots

Geospatial Information Standards

Threats

Borders amp Transportation

Biometrics

RFID

X-Ray

Customs

Information Analysis and Infrastructure

Protection

Modeling Simulation and

Analysis

Heating Ventilation and Air

Conditioning

Sensors

Structures

8

Number of standards in ANSI HSSD 6500Number of standards adopted by DHS 14

HSSD entries by SDO

ASTM 223ASME 4

ASHRAE 38IEEE 75AOAC 0UL 22

NFPA 131TIA 11

9

Homeland Security Standards Database wwwhssdus

Update on Activities of the ANSI Homeland Security

Standards Panel

11

Background Standards Coordination Needed

The National Strategy for Homeland Security (2002) identified the need for standards to support homeland security (HS) and emergency preparedness ndash Fourteen critical infrastructure areas were noted

January 2 2003 Report for Congress stated ndash ldquoNeither the federal government nor the nongovernmental

sector presently has a comprehensive consolidated program for developing new preparedness standardsrdquo

12

Response ANSI-HSSP February 5 2003 Formation of ANSI-HSSP

announced Facilitate the identification of existing and

development and enhancement of new homeland security standards

Examine role for conformity assessment activities

Serve as privatepublic sector forum for standards issues that cut cross-sector ndash A partnership Co-Chairs provided by industry and government

13

ANSI-HSSP Structure Led by ANSI-HSSP Co-Chairs Steering Committeendash Comprised of Government Agencies ANSI SDOs non-

ANSI SDOs and Companies (ANSI members and non-ANSI)

ndash Acts as US TAG to ISO SAG

Full Panel Approximately 100 organizational participants

Workshops utilized to address specific HS standards areas

14

ANSI-HSSP Participation Participation on the HSSP is open to all affected

interests (ANSI and non-ANSI members) includingndash Federal State and Local governmentsndash Industry representativesndash Trade Associations and Professional Societiesndash Standards Developers (ANSI and non-ANSI)ndash ForaConsortiandash Academiandash Consumer interests

15

Activities since Plenary in 2004 A plenary meeting was held September 2005 Published final report from workshop on Biological and

Chemical Threat Agents Launched workshop on standardization for Enterprise Power

Security and Continuity Launched workshop on Perimeter Security standardization Held final meeting of the workshop on standardization for

Training Programs for First Response to WMD events ANSI completed the Homeland Security Standards Database

(HSSD) which includes input from previous HSSP workshops convened

Partner with homeland security efforts such as DHS National Preparedness Month NCSP NGATS Security IPT etc

16

ANSI-HSSP Activities Going Forward

Emergency Communications workshop to meet December 14 and 15 at NIST Gaithersburgndash October meeting cancelled due to Katrina

Final report of Training Programs workshop being finalized

Task groups working in Power Security and Perimeter Security areas

Steering Committee to provide input to ISOIEC Strategic Advisory Group (SAG) on Security

Continue to examine potential new areas for workshops

17

Types of Emergency Communications

IndividualOrganization-to-IndividualOrganization ndash A citizen communicating an emergency to another citizen or private organization via available options

[eg ON-STAR-like message amateur radio mobile and land-line communications (eg CMRS FRS GMRS CB etc) broadcast and mass media Internet email lists faxes information services and word of mouth] Includes employer-to-employee and employer-to-employer emergency communications

ndash Includes Employer-to-Employee and Employer-to-Employer

IndividualOrganization-to-Governmentndash A citizen communicating an emergency message to appropriate authorities via available options (eg E9-

1-11-1-2 call to Public Safety Answering Point (PSAP) call to HSOC amateur radio and mobile communications (with or without location services)

Government-to-IndividualOrganizationndash Government or authorized officials communicating alerts or details of an emergency to citizens via

available options (eg Governmental mass media alerts citizen accessible radio services and common channels highway alerts voluntary citizen alert services [localized and national] e-mailvoice-mail and word of mouth)

Government-to-Government ndash Governmental authorities communicating to each other other agencies and appropriate National

Security Emergency Preparedness (NSEP)-designated private industry concerns and coordinators (ie using all forms of telecommunications services private radio Commercial Mobile Radio Services (CMRS) e-mailmessaging alerts etc)

18

WWWTIAONLINEORG

19

Introduction to TIA

Trade organization and Standards Development Organization (SDO) serving the communications and information technology industry

Three primary activitiesndash Standards developmentndash Trade shows marketingndash Global public policy

20

Introduction to TIA TIA is accredited by the American National Standards

Institute (ANSI) as a Standards Development Organization (SDO)

The 5th largest ANSI SDO measured by number of American National Standards

Over 1000 published specifications and standards TIA standards activities began in the 1920rsquos

ndash One Committee TR-8 meeting continuously since 1944

ndash This Committee works on interoperability standards for Public Safety users narrowband wideband and broadband

21

TIA HS Leadership Sector Coordinator PDD-63

and HSPD-7 Member NCC ISAC Steering Committee of

Comm SCC Sector Lead to PCIS and

Secretary Treasurer of PCIS Co-Chair ANSI HSSP Advisory Committee of

National Public Safety Telecommunications Council (NPSTC)

Participate on WGs of NSTAC and NIAC

Steering Committee of NCSP

Participate in DOCNTIA Economic Security WG

Executive Board of NIUSR Advisory Committee of

DHS SAFECOM FCC PS National

Coordination Committee (NCC)

FCC NRIC

22

TIA HS Standards Project 25 and MESA

ndash Mobility for Emergency and Safety Applications

ndash Narrowband wideband and broadband

cdma2000reg standards for IMT-2000

Wireless Priority Service (WPS)

Lawfully Authorized Electronic Surveillance (LAES)ndash Lead SDO supporting

CALEA

E-911 and Location-based standards

Terrestrial Mobile Multimedia Multicast (TM3)

NSTAC NGN for NSEP IPoS VoIP xxoIP Support for Gig-E

Networks

23

WWWTIAONLINEORGCIP

THANK YOU

Contacts Dan Bartdbarttiaonlineorg+17039077703

ANSI HSSP Matt Deanemdeaneansiorg

  • State and Local Emergency Needs Standards Training Exercises Strategic Planning and New Infrastructure Requirements STANDARDS Dan Bart TIA Co-Chair ANSI HSSP December 13 2005
  • Slide 7
  • Update on Activities of the ANSI Homeland Security Standards Panel
  • THANK YOU Contacts Dan Bart dbarttiaonlineorg +17039077703 ANSI HSSP Matt Deane mdeaneansiorg
Page 3: State and Local Emergency Needs: Standards, Training, Exercises, Strategic Planning, and New Infrastructure Requirements STANDARDS Dan Bart, TIA Co-Chair.

3

Standards at DHS SampT Standards MISSION

ndash Building confidence in homeland security technologies products services personnel and systems

Develop and coordinate the adoption of national standards and appropriate evaluation methods to meet homeland security mission needsndash 1048707 Requirements Developmentndash 1048707 Standards Development and Adoptionndash 1048707 Testing and Evaluation ndash Test Method Validationndash 1048707 Conformity Assessment ndash Compliance Testingndash 1048707 Coordination with Federal state local government

private sector and international standards community

4

DHS Standards DHS lacks statutory authority to issue

standards except in limited legacy programs ndash Coast Guard marine safety equipment

Public Law 104-113 (1995) - National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act (NTTAA) directs that agencies will use voluntary consensus standards

DHS will leverage expertise and resources of its partners at NIST and in the private sector standards communities to develop voluntary consensus standards

5

DHS Multiple Layers of StandardsRequirements

High visibility interagency issues (cyber security communications biometrics)

Cross-cutting issues within the new Department (emergency preparedness first responder equipment risk assessment)

Infrastructure support for standards for components (data standards cyber for CIO mission support Coast Guard FEMA TSA Secret Service)

6

DHS Strategic Partners for Standards

Interagency Agreement with National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST)

Coordinationcollaboration with specific agenciesndash DOE for RadNuc Countermeasures

ndash DOD CDC USDA FDA EPA for bio countermeasures

ndash DOJFBI DOS for biometrics

Alliance with American National Standards Institute (ANSI HSSP) and 300 + Standards Development Organizations (SDOs)ndash WWWANSIORGHSSP

ndash WWWHSSDUS

Standards Portfolio

Cyber

Emergency Preparedness and Response

Chemical Countermeasures

Biological Countermeasures

Radiological amp Nuclear

Countermeasures

High Explosives Countermeasures

Conformity Assessment

Incident Management

Communications

Training

Personal Protective Equipment

Urban Search and Rescue Robots

Geospatial Information Standards

Threats

Borders amp Transportation

Biometrics

RFID

X-Ray

Customs

Information Analysis and Infrastructure

Protection

Modeling Simulation and

Analysis

Heating Ventilation and Air

Conditioning

Sensors

Structures

8

Number of standards in ANSI HSSD 6500Number of standards adopted by DHS 14

HSSD entries by SDO

ASTM 223ASME 4

ASHRAE 38IEEE 75AOAC 0UL 22

NFPA 131TIA 11

9

Homeland Security Standards Database wwwhssdus

Update on Activities of the ANSI Homeland Security

Standards Panel

11

Background Standards Coordination Needed

The National Strategy for Homeland Security (2002) identified the need for standards to support homeland security (HS) and emergency preparedness ndash Fourteen critical infrastructure areas were noted

January 2 2003 Report for Congress stated ndash ldquoNeither the federal government nor the nongovernmental

sector presently has a comprehensive consolidated program for developing new preparedness standardsrdquo

12

Response ANSI-HSSP February 5 2003 Formation of ANSI-HSSP

announced Facilitate the identification of existing and

development and enhancement of new homeland security standards

Examine role for conformity assessment activities

Serve as privatepublic sector forum for standards issues that cut cross-sector ndash A partnership Co-Chairs provided by industry and government

13

ANSI-HSSP Structure Led by ANSI-HSSP Co-Chairs Steering Committeendash Comprised of Government Agencies ANSI SDOs non-

ANSI SDOs and Companies (ANSI members and non-ANSI)

ndash Acts as US TAG to ISO SAG

Full Panel Approximately 100 organizational participants

Workshops utilized to address specific HS standards areas

14

ANSI-HSSP Participation Participation on the HSSP is open to all affected

interests (ANSI and non-ANSI members) includingndash Federal State and Local governmentsndash Industry representativesndash Trade Associations and Professional Societiesndash Standards Developers (ANSI and non-ANSI)ndash ForaConsortiandash Academiandash Consumer interests

15

Activities since Plenary in 2004 A plenary meeting was held September 2005 Published final report from workshop on Biological and

Chemical Threat Agents Launched workshop on standardization for Enterprise Power

Security and Continuity Launched workshop on Perimeter Security standardization Held final meeting of the workshop on standardization for

Training Programs for First Response to WMD events ANSI completed the Homeland Security Standards Database

(HSSD) which includes input from previous HSSP workshops convened

Partner with homeland security efforts such as DHS National Preparedness Month NCSP NGATS Security IPT etc

16

ANSI-HSSP Activities Going Forward

Emergency Communications workshop to meet December 14 and 15 at NIST Gaithersburgndash October meeting cancelled due to Katrina

Final report of Training Programs workshop being finalized

Task groups working in Power Security and Perimeter Security areas

Steering Committee to provide input to ISOIEC Strategic Advisory Group (SAG) on Security

Continue to examine potential new areas for workshops

17

Types of Emergency Communications

IndividualOrganization-to-IndividualOrganization ndash A citizen communicating an emergency to another citizen or private organization via available options

[eg ON-STAR-like message amateur radio mobile and land-line communications (eg CMRS FRS GMRS CB etc) broadcast and mass media Internet email lists faxes information services and word of mouth] Includes employer-to-employee and employer-to-employer emergency communications

ndash Includes Employer-to-Employee and Employer-to-Employer

IndividualOrganization-to-Governmentndash A citizen communicating an emergency message to appropriate authorities via available options (eg E9-

1-11-1-2 call to Public Safety Answering Point (PSAP) call to HSOC amateur radio and mobile communications (with or without location services)

Government-to-IndividualOrganizationndash Government or authorized officials communicating alerts or details of an emergency to citizens via

available options (eg Governmental mass media alerts citizen accessible radio services and common channels highway alerts voluntary citizen alert services [localized and national] e-mailvoice-mail and word of mouth)

Government-to-Government ndash Governmental authorities communicating to each other other agencies and appropriate National

Security Emergency Preparedness (NSEP)-designated private industry concerns and coordinators (ie using all forms of telecommunications services private radio Commercial Mobile Radio Services (CMRS) e-mailmessaging alerts etc)

18

WWWTIAONLINEORG

19

Introduction to TIA

Trade organization and Standards Development Organization (SDO) serving the communications and information technology industry

Three primary activitiesndash Standards developmentndash Trade shows marketingndash Global public policy

20

Introduction to TIA TIA is accredited by the American National Standards

Institute (ANSI) as a Standards Development Organization (SDO)

The 5th largest ANSI SDO measured by number of American National Standards

Over 1000 published specifications and standards TIA standards activities began in the 1920rsquos

ndash One Committee TR-8 meeting continuously since 1944

ndash This Committee works on interoperability standards for Public Safety users narrowband wideband and broadband

21

TIA HS Leadership Sector Coordinator PDD-63

and HSPD-7 Member NCC ISAC Steering Committee of

Comm SCC Sector Lead to PCIS and

Secretary Treasurer of PCIS Co-Chair ANSI HSSP Advisory Committee of

National Public Safety Telecommunications Council (NPSTC)

Participate on WGs of NSTAC and NIAC

Steering Committee of NCSP

Participate in DOCNTIA Economic Security WG

Executive Board of NIUSR Advisory Committee of

DHS SAFECOM FCC PS National

Coordination Committee (NCC)

FCC NRIC

22

TIA HS Standards Project 25 and MESA

ndash Mobility for Emergency and Safety Applications

ndash Narrowband wideband and broadband

cdma2000reg standards for IMT-2000

Wireless Priority Service (WPS)

Lawfully Authorized Electronic Surveillance (LAES)ndash Lead SDO supporting

CALEA

E-911 and Location-based standards

Terrestrial Mobile Multimedia Multicast (TM3)

NSTAC NGN for NSEP IPoS VoIP xxoIP Support for Gig-E

Networks

23

WWWTIAONLINEORGCIP

THANK YOU

Contacts Dan Bartdbarttiaonlineorg+17039077703

ANSI HSSP Matt Deanemdeaneansiorg

  • State and Local Emergency Needs Standards Training Exercises Strategic Planning and New Infrastructure Requirements STANDARDS Dan Bart TIA Co-Chair ANSI HSSP December 13 2005
  • Slide 7
  • Update on Activities of the ANSI Homeland Security Standards Panel
  • THANK YOU Contacts Dan Bart dbarttiaonlineorg +17039077703 ANSI HSSP Matt Deane mdeaneansiorg
Page 4: State and Local Emergency Needs: Standards, Training, Exercises, Strategic Planning, and New Infrastructure Requirements STANDARDS Dan Bart, TIA Co-Chair.

4

DHS Standards DHS lacks statutory authority to issue

standards except in limited legacy programs ndash Coast Guard marine safety equipment

Public Law 104-113 (1995) - National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act (NTTAA) directs that agencies will use voluntary consensus standards

DHS will leverage expertise and resources of its partners at NIST and in the private sector standards communities to develop voluntary consensus standards

5

DHS Multiple Layers of StandardsRequirements

High visibility interagency issues (cyber security communications biometrics)

Cross-cutting issues within the new Department (emergency preparedness first responder equipment risk assessment)

Infrastructure support for standards for components (data standards cyber for CIO mission support Coast Guard FEMA TSA Secret Service)

6

DHS Strategic Partners for Standards

Interagency Agreement with National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST)

Coordinationcollaboration with specific agenciesndash DOE for RadNuc Countermeasures

ndash DOD CDC USDA FDA EPA for bio countermeasures

ndash DOJFBI DOS for biometrics

Alliance with American National Standards Institute (ANSI HSSP) and 300 + Standards Development Organizations (SDOs)ndash WWWANSIORGHSSP

ndash WWWHSSDUS

Standards Portfolio

Cyber

Emergency Preparedness and Response

Chemical Countermeasures

Biological Countermeasures

Radiological amp Nuclear

Countermeasures

High Explosives Countermeasures

Conformity Assessment

Incident Management

Communications

Training

Personal Protective Equipment

Urban Search and Rescue Robots

Geospatial Information Standards

Threats

Borders amp Transportation

Biometrics

RFID

X-Ray

Customs

Information Analysis and Infrastructure

Protection

Modeling Simulation and

Analysis

Heating Ventilation and Air

Conditioning

Sensors

Structures

8

Number of standards in ANSI HSSD 6500Number of standards adopted by DHS 14

HSSD entries by SDO

ASTM 223ASME 4

ASHRAE 38IEEE 75AOAC 0UL 22

NFPA 131TIA 11

9

Homeland Security Standards Database wwwhssdus

Update on Activities of the ANSI Homeland Security

Standards Panel

11

Background Standards Coordination Needed

The National Strategy for Homeland Security (2002) identified the need for standards to support homeland security (HS) and emergency preparedness ndash Fourteen critical infrastructure areas were noted

January 2 2003 Report for Congress stated ndash ldquoNeither the federal government nor the nongovernmental

sector presently has a comprehensive consolidated program for developing new preparedness standardsrdquo

12

Response ANSI-HSSP February 5 2003 Formation of ANSI-HSSP

announced Facilitate the identification of existing and

development and enhancement of new homeland security standards

Examine role for conformity assessment activities

Serve as privatepublic sector forum for standards issues that cut cross-sector ndash A partnership Co-Chairs provided by industry and government

13

ANSI-HSSP Structure Led by ANSI-HSSP Co-Chairs Steering Committeendash Comprised of Government Agencies ANSI SDOs non-

ANSI SDOs and Companies (ANSI members and non-ANSI)

ndash Acts as US TAG to ISO SAG

Full Panel Approximately 100 organizational participants

Workshops utilized to address specific HS standards areas

14

ANSI-HSSP Participation Participation on the HSSP is open to all affected

interests (ANSI and non-ANSI members) includingndash Federal State and Local governmentsndash Industry representativesndash Trade Associations and Professional Societiesndash Standards Developers (ANSI and non-ANSI)ndash ForaConsortiandash Academiandash Consumer interests

15

Activities since Plenary in 2004 A plenary meeting was held September 2005 Published final report from workshop on Biological and

Chemical Threat Agents Launched workshop on standardization for Enterprise Power

Security and Continuity Launched workshop on Perimeter Security standardization Held final meeting of the workshop on standardization for

Training Programs for First Response to WMD events ANSI completed the Homeland Security Standards Database

(HSSD) which includes input from previous HSSP workshops convened

Partner with homeland security efforts such as DHS National Preparedness Month NCSP NGATS Security IPT etc

16

ANSI-HSSP Activities Going Forward

Emergency Communications workshop to meet December 14 and 15 at NIST Gaithersburgndash October meeting cancelled due to Katrina

Final report of Training Programs workshop being finalized

Task groups working in Power Security and Perimeter Security areas

Steering Committee to provide input to ISOIEC Strategic Advisory Group (SAG) on Security

Continue to examine potential new areas for workshops

17

Types of Emergency Communications

IndividualOrganization-to-IndividualOrganization ndash A citizen communicating an emergency to another citizen or private organization via available options

[eg ON-STAR-like message amateur radio mobile and land-line communications (eg CMRS FRS GMRS CB etc) broadcast and mass media Internet email lists faxes information services and word of mouth] Includes employer-to-employee and employer-to-employer emergency communications

ndash Includes Employer-to-Employee and Employer-to-Employer

IndividualOrganization-to-Governmentndash A citizen communicating an emergency message to appropriate authorities via available options (eg E9-

1-11-1-2 call to Public Safety Answering Point (PSAP) call to HSOC amateur radio and mobile communications (with or without location services)

Government-to-IndividualOrganizationndash Government or authorized officials communicating alerts or details of an emergency to citizens via

available options (eg Governmental mass media alerts citizen accessible radio services and common channels highway alerts voluntary citizen alert services [localized and national] e-mailvoice-mail and word of mouth)

Government-to-Government ndash Governmental authorities communicating to each other other agencies and appropriate National

Security Emergency Preparedness (NSEP)-designated private industry concerns and coordinators (ie using all forms of telecommunications services private radio Commercial Mobile Radio Services (CMRS) e-mailmessaging alerts etc)

18

WWWTIAONLINEORG

19

Introduction to TIA

Trade organization and Standards Development Organization (SDO) serving the communications and information technology industry

Three primary activitiesndash Standards developmentndash Trade shows marketingndash Global public policy

20

Introduction to TIA TIA is accredited by the American National Standards

Institute (ANSI) as a Standards Development Organization (SDO)

The 5th largest ANSI SDO measured by number of American National Standards

Over 1000 published specifications and standards TIA standards activities began in the 1920rsquos

ndash One Committee TR-8 meeting continuously since 1944

ndash This Committee works on interoperability standards for Public Safety users narrowband wideband and broadband

21

TIA HS Leadership Sector Coordinator PDD-63

and HSPD-7 Member NCC ISAC Steering Committee of

Comm SCC Sector Lead to PCIS and

Secretary Treasurer of PCIS Co-Chair ANSI HSSP Advisory Committee of

National Public Safety Telecommunications Council (NPSTC)

Participate on WGs of NSTAC and NIAC

Steering Committee of NCSP

Participate in DOCNTIA Economic Security WG

Executive Board of NIUSR Advisory Committee of

DHS SAFECOM FCC PS National

Coordination Committee (NCC)

FCC NRIC

22

TIA HS Standards Project 25 and MESA

ndash Mobility for Emergency and Safety Applications

ndash Narrowband wideband and broadband

cdma2000reg standards for IMT-2000

Wireless Priority Service (WPS)

Lawfully Authorized Electronic Surveillance (LAES)ndash Lead SDO supporting

CALEA

E-911 and Location-based standards

Terrestrial Mobile Multimedia Multicast (TM3)

NSTAC NGN for NSEP IPoS VoIP xxoIP Support for Gig-E

Networks

23

WWWTIAONLINEORGCIP

THANK YOU

Contacts Dan Bartdbarttiaonlineorg+17039077703

ANSI HSSP Matt Deanemdeaneansiorg

  • State and Local Emergency Needs Standards Training Exercises Strategic Planning and New Infrastructure Requirements STANDARDS Dan Bart TIA Co-Chair ANSI HSSP December 13 2005
  • Slide 7
  • Update on Activities of the ANSI Homeland Security Standards Panel
  • THANK YOU Contacts Dan Bart dbarttiaonlineorg +17039077703 ANSI HSSP Matt Deane mdeaneansiorg
Page 5: State and Local Emergency Needs: Standards, Training, Exercises, Strategic Planning, and New Infrastructure Requirements STANDARDS Dan Bart, TIA Co-Chair.

5

DHS Multiple Layers of StandardsRequirements

High visibility interagency issues (cyber security communications biometrics)

Cross-cutting issues within the new Department (emergency preparedness first responder equipment risk assessment)

Infrastructure support for standards for components (data standards cyber for CIO mission support Coast Guard FEMA TSA Secret Service)

6

DHS Strategic Partners for Standards

Interagency Agreement with National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST)

Coordinationcollaboration with specific agenciesndash DOE for RadNuc Countermeasures

ndash DOD CDC USDA FDA EPA for bio countermeasures

ndash DOJFBI DOS for biometrics

Alliance with American National Standards Institute (ANSI HSSP) and 300 + Standards Development Organizations (SDOs)ndash WWWANSIORGHSSP

ndash WWWHSSDUS

Standards Portfolio

Cyber

Emergency Preparedness and Response

Chemical Countermeasures

Biological Countermeasures

Radiological amp Nuclear

Countermeasures

High Explosives Countermeasures

Conformity Assessment

Incident Management

Communications

Training

Personal Protective Equipment

Urban Search and Rescue Robots

Geospatial Information Standards

Threats

Borders amp Transportation

Biometrics

RFID

X-Ray

Customs

Information Analysis and Infrastructure

Protection

Modeling Simulation and

Analysis

Heating Ventilation and Air

Conditioning

Sensors

Structures

8

Number of standards in ANSI HSSD 6500Number of standards adopted by DHS 14

HSSD entries by SDO

ASTM 223ASME 4

ASHRAE 38IEEE 75AOAC 0UL 22

NFPA 131TIA 11

9

Homeland Security Standards Database wwwhssdus

Update on Activities of the ANSI Homeland Security

Standards Panel

11

Background Standards Coordination Needed

The National Strategy for Homeland Security (2002) identified the need for standards to support homeland security (HS) and emergency preparedness ndash Fourteen critical infrastructure areas were noted

January 2 2003 Report for Congress stated ndash ldquoNeither the federal government nor the nongovernmental

sector presently has a comprehensive consolidated program for developing new preparedness standardsrdquo

12

Response ANSI-HSSP February 5 2003 Formation of ANSI-HSSP

announced Facilitate the identification of existing and

development and enhancement of new homeland security standards

Examine role for conformity assessment activities

Serve as privatepublic sector forum for standards issues that cut cross-sector ndash A partnership Co-Chairs provided by industry and government

13

ANSI-HSSP Structure Led by ANSI-HSSP Co-Chairs Steering Committeendash Comprised of Government Agencies ANSI SDOs non-

ANSI SDOs and Companies (ANSI members and non-ANSI)

ndash Acts as US TAG to ISO SAG

Full Panel Approximately 100 organizational participants

Workshops utilized to address specific HS standards areas

14

ANSI-HSSP Participation Participation on the HSSP is open to all affected

interests (ANSI and non-ANSI members) includingndash Federal State and Local governmentsndash Industry representativesndash Trade Associations and Professional Societiesndash Standards Developers (ANSI and non-ANSI)ndash ForaConsortiandash Academiandash Consumer interests

15

Activities since Plenary in 2004 A plenary meeting was held September 2005 Published final report from workshop on Biological and

Chemical Threat Agents Launched workshop on standardization for Enterprise Power

Security and Continuity Launched workshop on Perimeter Security standardization Held final meeting of the workshop on standardization for

Training Programs for First Response to WMD events ANSI completed the Homeland Security Standards Database

(HSSD) which includes input from previous HSSP workshops convened

Partner with homeland security efforts such as DHS National Preparedness Month NCSP NGATS Security IPT etc

16

ANSI-HSSP Activities Going Forward

Emergency Communications workshop to meet December 14 and 15 at NIST Gaithersburgndash October meeting cancelled due to Katrina

Final report of Training Programs workshop being finalized

Task groups working in Power Security and Perimeter Security areas

Steering Committee to provide input to ISOIEC Strategic Advisory Group (SAG) on Security

Continue to examine potential new areas for workshops

17

Types of Emergency Communications

IndividualOrganization-to-IndividualOrganization ndash A citizen communicating an emergency to another citizen or private organization via available options

[eg ON-STAR-like message amateur radio mobile and land-line communications (eg CMRS FRS GMRS CB etc) broadcast and mass media Internet email lists faxes information services and word of mouth] Includes employer-to-employee and employer-to-employer emergency communications

ndash Includes Employer-to-Employee and Employer-to-Employer

IndividualOrganization-to-Governmentndash A citizen communicating an emergency message to appropriate authorities via available options (eg E9-

1-11-1-2 call to Public Safety Answering Point (PSAP) call to HSOC amateur radio and mobile communications (with or without location services)

Government-to-IndividualOrganizationndash Government or authorized officials communicating alerts or details of an emergency to citizens via

available options (eg Governmental mass media alerts citizen accessible radio services and common channels highway alerts voluntary citizen alert services [localized and national] e-mailvoice-mail and word of mouth)

Government-to-Government ndash Governmental authorities communicating to each other other agencies and appropriate National

Security Emergency Preparedness (NSEP)-designated private industry concerns and coordinators (ie using all forms of telecommunications services private radio Commercial Mobile Radio Services (CMRS) e-mailmessaging alerts etc)

18

WWWTIAONLINEORG

19

Introduction to TIA

Trade organization and Standards Development Organization (SDO) serving the communications and information technology industry

Three primary activitiesndash Standards developmentndash Trade shows marketingndash Global public policy

20

Introduction to TIA TIA is accredited by the American National Standards

Institute (ANSI) as a Standards Development Organization (SDO)

The 5th largest ANSI SDO measured by number of American National Standards

Over 1000 published specifications and standards TIA standards activities began in the 1920rsquos

ndash One Committee TR-8 meeting continuously since 1944

ndash This Committee works on interoperability standards for Public Safety users narrowband wideband and broadband

21

TIA HS Leadership Sector Coordinator PDD-63

and HSPD-7 Member NCC ISAC Steering Committee of

Comm SCC Sector Lead to PCIS and

Secretary Treasurer of PCIS Co-Chair ANSI HSSP Advisory Committee of

National Public Safety Telecommunications Council (NPSTC)

Participate on WGs of NSTAC and NIAC

Steering Committee of NCSP

Participate in DOCNTIA Economic Security WG

Executive Board of NIUSR Advisory Committee of

DHS SAFECOM FCC PS National

Coordination Committee (NCC)

FCC NRIC

22

TIA HS Standards Project 25 and MESA

ndash Mobility for Emergency and Safety Applications

ndash Narrowband wideband and broadband

cdma2000reg standards for IMT-2000

Wireless Priority Service (WPS)

Lawfully Authorized Electronic Surveillance (LAES)ndash Lead SDO supporting

CALEA

E-911 and Location-based standards

Terrestrial Mobile Multimedia Multicast (TM3)

NSTAC NGN for NSEP IPoS VoIP xxoIP Support for Gig-E

Networks

23

WWWTIAONLINEORGCIP

THANK YOU

Contacts Dan Bartdbarttiaonlineorg+17039077703

ANSI HSSP Matt Deanemdeaneansiorg

  • State and Local Emergency Needs Standards Training Exercises Strategic Planning and New Infrastructure Requirements STANDARDS Dan Bart TIA Co-Chair ANSI HSSP December 13 2005
  • Slide 7
  • Update on Activities of the ANSI Homeland Security Standards Panel
  • THANK YOU Contacts Dan Bart dbarttiaonlineorg +17039077703 ANSI HSSP Matt Deane mdeaneansiorg
Page 6: State and Local Emergency Needs: Standards, Training, Exercises, Strategic Planning, and New Infrastructure Requirements STANDARDS Dan Bart, TIA Co-Chair.

6

DHS Strategic Partners for Standards

Interagency Agreement with National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST)

Coordinationcollaboration with specific agenciesndash DOE for RadNuc Countermeasures

ndash DOD CDC USDA FDA EPA for bio countermeasures

ndash DOJFBI DOS for biometrics

Alliance with American National Standards Institute (ANSI HSSP) and 300 + Standards Development Organizations (SDOs)ndash WWWANSIORGHSSP

ndash WWWHSSDUS

Standards Portfolio

Cyber

Emergency Preparedness and Response

Chemical Countermeasures

Biological Countermeasures

Radiological amp Nuclear

Countermeasures

High Explosives Countermeasures

Conformity Assessment

Incident Management

Communications

Training

Personal Protective Equipment

Urban Search and Rescue Robots

Geospatial Information Standards

Threats

Borders amp Transportation

Biometrics

RFID

X-Ray

Customs

Information Analysis and Infrastructure

Protection

Modeling Simulation and

Analysis

Heating Ventilation and Air

Conditioning

Sensors

Structures

8

Number of standards in ANSI HSSD 6500Number of standards adopted by DHS 14

HSSD entries by SDO

ASTM 223ASME 4

ASHRAE 38IEEE 75AOAC 0UL 22

NFPA 131TIA 11

9

Homeland Security Standards Database wwwhssdus

Update on Activities of the ANSI Homeland Security

Standards Panel

11

Background Standards Coordination Needed

The National Strategy for Homeland Security (2002) identified the need for standards to support homeland security (HS) and emergency preparedness ndash Fourteen critical infrastructure areas were noted

January 2 2003 Report for Congress stated ndash ldquoNeither the federal government nor the nongovernmental

sector presently has a comprehensive consolidated program for developing new preparedness standardsrdquo

12

Response ANSI-HSSP February 5 2003 Formation of ANSI-HSSP

announced Facilitate the identification of existing and

development and enhancement of new homeland security standards

Examine role for conformity assessment activities

Serve as privatepublic sector forum for standards issues that cut cross-sector ndash A partnership Co-Chairs provided by industry and government

13

ANSI-HSSP Structure Led by ANSI-HSSP Co-Chairs Steering Committeendash Comprised of Government Agencies ANSI SDOs non-

ANSI SDOs and Companies (ANSI members and non-ANSI)

ndash Acts as US TAG to ISO SAG

Full Panel Approximately 100 organizational participants

Workshops utilized to address specific HS standards areas

14

ANSI-HSSP Participation Participation on the HSSP is open to all affected

interests (ANSI and non-ANSI members) includingndash Federal State and Local governmentsndash Industry representativesndash Trade Associations and Professional Societiesndash Standards Developers (ANSI and non-ANSI)ndash ForaConsortiandash Academiandash Consumer interests

15

Activities since Plenary in 2004 A plenary meeting was held September 2005 Published final report from workshop on Biological and

Chemical Threat Agents Launched workshop on standardization for Enterprise Power

Security and Continuity Launched workshop on Perimeter Security standardization Held final meeting of the workshop on standardization for

Training Programs for First Response to WMD events ANSI completed the Homeland Security Standards Database

(HSSD) which includes input from previous HSSP workshops convened

Partner with homeland security efforts such as DHS National Preparedness Month NCSP NGATS Security IPT etc

16

ANSI-HSSP Activities Going Forward

Emergency Communications workshop to meet December 14 and 15 at NIST Gaithersburgndash October meeting cancelled due to Katrina

Final report of Training Programs workshop being finalized

Task groups working in Power Security and Perimeter Security areas

Steering Committee to provide input to ISOIEC Strategic Advisory Group (SAG) on Security

Continue to examine potential new areas for workshops

17

Types of Emergency Communications

IndividualOrganization-to-IndividualOrganization ndash A citizen communicating an emergency to another citizen or private organization via available options

[eg ON-STAR-like message amateur radio mobile and land-line communications (eg CMRS FRS GMRS CB etc) broadcast and mass media Internet email lists faxes information services and word of mouth] Includes employer-to-employee and employer-to-employer emergency communications

ndash Includes Employer-to-Employee and Employer-to-Employer

IndividualOrganization-to-Governmentndash A citizen communicating an emergency message to appropriate authorities via available options (eg E9-

1-11-1-2 call to Public Safety Answering Point (PSAP) call to HSOC amateur radio and mobile communications (with or without location services)

Government-to-IndividualOrganizationndash Government or authorized officials communicating alerts or details of an emergency to citizens via

available options (eg Governmental mass media alerts citizen accessible radio services and common channels highway alerts voluntary citizen alert services [localized and national] e-mailvoice-mail and word of mouth)

Government-to-Government ndash Governmental authorities communicating to each other other agencies and appropriate National

Security Emergency Preparedness (NSEP)-designated private industry concerns and coordinators (ie using all forms of telecommunications services private radio Commercial Mobile Radio Services (CMRS) e-mailmessaging alerts etc)

18

WWWTIAONLINEORG

19

Introduction to TIA

Trade organization and Standards Development Organization (SDO) serving the communications and information technology industry

Three primary activitiesndash Standards developmentndash Trade shows marketingndash Global public policy

20

Introduction to TIA TIA is accredited by the American National Standards

Institute (ANSI) as a Standards Development Organization (SDO)

The 5th largest ANSI SDO measured by number of American National Standards

Over 1000 published specifications and standards TIA standards activities began in the 1920rsquos

ndash One Committee TR-8 meeting continuously since 1944

ndash This Committee works on interoperability standards for Public Safety users narrowband wideband and broadband

21

TIA HS Leadership Sector Coordinator PDD-63

and HSPD-7 Member NCC ISAC Steering Committee of

Comm SCC Sector Lead to PCIS and

Secretary Treasurer of PCIS Co-Chair ANSI HSSP Advisory Committee of

National Public Safety Telecommunications Council (NPSTC)

Participate on WGs of NSTAC and NIAC

Steering Committee of NCSP

Participate in DOCNTIA Economic Security WG

Executive Board of NIUSR Advisory Committee of

DHS SAFECOM FCC PS National

Coordination Committee (NCC)

FCC NRIC

22

TIA HS Standards Project 25 and MESA

ndash Mobility for Emergency and Safety Applications

ndash Narrowband wideband and broadband

cdma2000reg standards for IMT-2000

Wireless Priority Service (WPS)

Lawfully Authorized Electronic Surveillance (LAES)ndash Lead SDO supporting

CALEA

E-911 and Location-based standards

Terrestrial Mobile Multimedia Multicast (TM3)

NSTAC NGN for NSEP IPoS VoIP xxoIP Support for Gig-E

Networks

23

WWWTIAONLINEORGCIP

THANK YOU

Contacts Dan Bartdbarttiaonlineorg+17039077703

ANSI HSSP Matt Deanemdeaneansiorg

  • State and Local Emergency Needs Standards Training Exercises Strategic Planning and New Infrastructure Requirements STANDARDS Dan Bart TIA Co-Chair ANSI HSSP December 13 2005
  • Slide 7
  • Update on Activities of the ANSI Homeland Security Standards Panel
  • THANK YOU Contacts Dan Bart dbarttiaonlineorg +17039077703 ANSI HSSP Matt Deane mdeaneansiorg
Page 7: State and Local Emergency Needs: Standards, Training, Exercises, Strategic Planning, and New Infrastructure Requirements STANDARDS Dan Bart, TIA Co-Chair.

Standards Portfolio

Cyber

Emergency Preparedness and Response

Chemical Countermeasures

Biological Countermeasures

Radiological amp Nuclear

Countermeasures

High Explosives Countermeasures

Conformity Assessment

Incident Management

Communications

Training

Personal Protective Equipment

Urban Search and Rescue Robots

Geospatial Information Standards

Threats

Borders amp Transportation

Biometrics

RFID

X-Ray

Customs

Information Analysis and Infrastructure

Protection

Modeling Simulation and

Analysis

Heating Ventilation and Air

Conditioning

Sensors

Structures

8

Number of standards in ANSI HSSD 6500Number of standards adopted by DHS 14

HSSD entries by SDO

ASTM 223ASME 4

ASHRAE 38IEEE 75AOAC 0UL 22

NFPA 131TIA 11

9

Homeland Security Standards Database wwwhssdus

Update on Activities of the ANSI Homeland Security

Standards Panel

11

Background Standards Coordination Needed

The National Strategy for Homeland Security (2002) identified the need for standards to support homeland security (HS) and emergency preparedness ndash Fourteen critical infrastructure areas were noted

January 2 2003 Report for Congress stated ndash ldquoNeither the federal government nor the nongovernmental

sector presently has a comprehensive consolidated program for developing new preparedness standardsrdquo

12

Response ANSI-HSSP February 5 2003 Formation of ANSI-HSSP

announced Facilitate the identification of existing and

development and enhancement of new homeland security standards

Examine role for conformity assessment activities

Serve as privatepublic sector forum for standards issues that cut cross-sector ndash A partnership Co-Chairs provided by industry and government

13

ANSI-HSSP Structure Led by ANSI-HSSP Co-Chairs Steering Committeendash Comprised of Government Agencies ANSI SDOs non-

ANSI SDOs and Companies (ANSI members and non-ANSI)

ndash Acts as US TAG to ISO SAG

Full Panel Approximately 100 organizational participants

Workshops utilized to address specific HS standards areas

14

ANSI-HSSP Participation Participation on the HSSP is open to all affected

interests (ANSI and non-ANSI members) includingndash Federal State and Local governmentsndash Industry representativesndash Trade Associations and Professional Societiesndash Standards Developers (ANSI and non-ANSI)ndash ForaConsortiandash Academiandash Consumer interests

15

Activities since Plenary in 2004 A plenary meeting was held September 2005 Published final report from workshop on Biological and

Chemical Threat Agents Launched workshop on standardization for Enterprise Power

Security and Continuity Launched workshop on Perimeter Security standardization Held final meeting of the workshop on standardization for

Training Programs for First Response to WMD events ANSI completed the Homeland Security Standards Database

(HSSD) which includes input from previous HSSP workshops convened

Partner with homeland security efforts such as DHS National Preparedness Month NCSP NGATS Security IPT etc

16

ANSI-HSSP Activities Going Forward

Emergency Communications workshop to meet December 14 and 15 at NIST Gaithersburgndash October meeting cancelled due to Katrina

Final report of Training Programs workshop being finalized

Task groups working in Power Security and Perimeter Security areas

Steering Committee to provide input to ISOIEC Strategic Advisory Group (SAG) on Security

Continue to examine potential new areas for workshops

17

Types of Emergency Communications

IndividualOrganization-to-IndividualOrganization ndash A citizen communicating an emergency to another citizen or private organization via available options

[eg ON-STAR-like message amateur radio mobile and land-line communications (eg CMRS FRS GMRS CB etc) broadcast and mass media Internet email lists faxes information services and word of mouth] Includes employer-to-employee and employer-to-employer emergency communications

ndash Includes Employer-to-Employee and Employer-to-Employer

IndividualOrganization-to-Governmentndash A citizen communicating an emergency message to appropriate authorities via available options (eg E9-

1-11-1-2 call to Public Safety Answering Point (PSAP) call to HSOC amateur radio and mobile communications (with or without location services)

Government-to-IndividualOrganizationndash Government or authorized officials communicating alerts or details of an emergency to citizens via

available options (eg Governmental mass media alerts citizen accessible radio services and common channels highway alerts voluntary citizen alert services [localized and national] e-mailvoice-mail and word of mouth)

Government-to-Government ndash Governmental authorities communicating to each other other agencies and appropriate National

Security Emergency Preparedness (NSEP)-designated private industry concerns and coordinators (ie using all forms of telecommunications services private radio Commercial Mobile Radio Services (CMRS) e-mailmessaging alerts etc)

18

WWWTIAONLINEORG

19

Introduction to TIA

Trade organization and Standards Development Organization (SDO) serving the communications and information technology industry

Three primary activitiesndash Standards developmentndash Trade shows marketingndash Global public policy

20

Introduction to TIA TIA is accredited by the American National Standards

Institute (ANSI) as a Standards Development Organization (SDO)

The 5th largest ANSI SDO measured by number of American National Standards

Over 1000 published specifications and standards TIA standards activities began in the 1920rsquos

ndash One Committee TR-8 meeting continuously since 1944

ndash This Committee works on interoperability standards for Public Safety users narrowband wideband and broadband

21

TIA HS Leadership Sector Coordinator PDD-63

and HSPD-7 Member NCC ISAC Steering Committee of

Comm SCC Sector Lead to PCIS and

Secretary Treasurer of PCIS Co-Chair ANSI HSSP Advisory Committee of

National Public Safety Telecommunications Council (NPSTC)

Participate on WGs of NSTAC and NIAC

Steering Committee of NCSP

Participate in DOCNTIA Economic Security WG

Executive Board of NIUSR Advisory Committee of

DHS SAFECOM FCC PS National

Coordination Committee (NCC)

FCC NRIC

22

TIA HS Standards Project 25 and MESA

ndash Mobility for Emergency and Safety Applications

ndash Narrowband wideband and broadband

cdma2000reg standards for IMT-2000

Wireless Priority Service (WPS)

Lawfully Authorized Electronic Surveillance (LAES)ndash Lead SDO supporting

CALEA

E-911 and Location-based standards

Terrestrial Mobile Multimedia Multicast (TM3)

NSTAC NGN for NSEP IPoS VoIP xxoIP Support for Gig-E

Networks

23

WWWTIAONLINEORGCIP

THANK YOU

Contacts Dan Bartdbarttiaonlineorg+17039077703

ANSI HSSP Matt Deanemdeaneansiorg

  • State and Local Emergency Needs Standards Training Exercises Strategic Planning and New Infrastructure Requirements STANDARDS Dan Bart TIA Co-Chair ANSI HSSP December 13 2005
  • Slide 7
  • Update on Activities of the ANSI Homeland Security Standards Panel
  • THANK YOU Contacts Dan Bart dbarttiaonlineorg +17039077703 ANSI HSSP Matt Deane mdeaneansiorg
Page 8: State and Local Emergency Needs: Standards, Training, Exercises, Strategic Planning, and New Infrastructure Requirements STANDARDS Dan Bart, TIA Co-Chair.

8

Number of standards in ANSI HSSD 6500Number of standards adopted by DHS 14

HSSD entries by SDO

ASTM 223ASME 4

ASHRAE 38IEEE 75AOAC 0UL 22

NFPA 131TIA 11

9

Homeland Security Standards Database wwwhssdus

Update on Activities of the ANSI Homeland Security

Standards Panel

11

Background Standards Coordination Needed

The National Strategy for Homeland Security (2002) identified the need for standards to support homeland security (HS) and emergency preparedness ndash Fourteen critical infrastructure areas were noted

January 2 2003 Report for Congress stated ndash ldquoNeither the federal government nor the nongovernmental

sector presently has a comprehensive consolidated program for developing new preparedness standardsrdquo

12

Response ANSI-HSSP February 5 2003 Formation of ANSI-HSSP

announced Facilitate the identification of existing and

development and enhancement of new homeland security standards

Examine role for conformity assessment activities

Serve as privatepublic sector forum for standards issues that cut cross-sector ndash A partnership Co-Chairs provided by industry and government

13

ANSI-HSSP Structure Led by ANSI-HSSP Co-Chairs Steering Committeendash Comprised of Government Agencies ANSI SDOs non-

ANSI SDOs and Companies (ANSI members and non-ANSI)

ndash Acts as US TAG to ISO SAG

Full Panel Approximately 100 organizational participants

Workshops utilized to address specific HS standards areas

14

ANSI-HSSP Participation Participation on the HSSP is open to all affected

interests (ANSI and non-ANSI members) includingndash Federal State and Local governmentsndash Industry representativesndash Trade Associations and Professional Societiesndash Standards Developers (ANSI and non-ANSI)ndash ForaConsortiandash Academiandash Consumer interests

15

Activities since Plenary in 2004 A plenary meeting was held September 2005 Published final report from workshop on Biological and

Chemical Threat Agents Launched workshop on standardization for Enterprise Power

Security and Continuity Launched workshop on Perimeter Security standardization Held final meeting of the workshop on standardization for

Training Programs for First Response to WMD events ANSI completed the Homeland Security Standards Database

(HSSD) which includes input from previous HSSP workshops convened

Partner with homeland security efforts such as DHS National Preparedness Month NCSP NGATS Security IPT etc

16

ANSI-HSSP Activities Going Forward

Emergency Communications workshop to meet December 14 and 15 at NIST Gaithersburgndash October meeting cancelled due to Katrina

Final report of Training Programs workshop being finalized

Task groups working in Power Security and Perimeter Security areas

Steering Committee to provide input to ISOIEC Strategic Advisory Group (SAG) on Security

Continue to examine potential new areas for workshops

17

Types of Emergency Communications

IndividualOrganization-to-IndividualOrganization ndash A citizen communicating an emergency to another citizen or private organization via available options

[eg ON-STAR-like message amateur radio mobile and land-line communications (eg CMRS FRS GMRS CB etc) broadcast and mass media Internet email lists faxes information services and word of mouth] Includes employer-to-employee and employer-to-employer emergency communications

ndash Includes Employer-to-Employee and Employer-to-Employer

IndividualOrganization-to-Governmentndash A citizen communicating an emergency message to appropriate authorities via available options (eg E9-

1-11-1-2 call to Public Safety Answering Point (PSAP) call to HSOC amateur radio and mobile communications (with or without location services)

Government-to-IndividualOrganizationndash Government or authorized officials communicating alerts or details of an emergency to citizens via

available options (eg Governmental mass media alerts citizen accessible radio services and common channels highway alerts voluntary citizen alert services [localized and national] e-mailvoice-mail and word of mouth)

Government-to-Government ndash Governmental authorities communicating to each other other agencies and appropriate National

Security Emergency Preparedness (NSEP)-designated private industry concerns and coordinators (ie using all forms of telecommunications services private radio Commercial Mobile Radio Services (CMRS) e-mailmessaging alerts etc)

18

WWWTIAONLINEORG

19

Introduction to TIA

Trade organization and Standards Development Organization (SDO) serving the communications and information technology industry

Three primary activitiesndash Standards developmentndash Trade shows marketingndash Global public policy

20

Introduction to TIA TIA is accredited by the American National Standards

Institute (ANSI) as a Standards Development Organization (SDO)

The 5th largest ANSI SDO measured by number of American National Standards

Over 1000 published specifications and standards TIA standards activities began in the 1920rsquos

ndash One Committee TR-8 meeting continuously since 1944

ndash This Committee works on interoperability standards for Public Safety users narrowband wideband and broadband

21

TIA HS Leadership Sector Coordinator PDD-63

and HSPD-7 Member NCC ISAC Steering Committee of

Comm SCC Sector Lead to PCIS and

Secretary Treasurer of PCIS Co-Chair ANSI HSSP Advisory Committee of

National Public Safety Telecommunications Council (NPSTC)

Participate on WGs of NSTAC and NIAC

Steering Committee of NCSP

Participate in DOCNTIA Economic Security WG

Executive Board of NIUSR Advisory Committee of

DHS SAFECOM FCC PS National

Coordination Committee (NCC)

FCC NRIC

22

TIA HS Standards Project 25 and MESA

ndash Mobility for Emergency and Safety Applications

ndash Narrowband wideband and broadband

cdma2000reg standards for IMT-2000

Wireless Priority Service (WPS)

Lawfully Authorized Electronic Surveillance (LAES)ndash Lead SDO supporting

CALEA

E-911 and Location-based standards

Terrestrial Mobile Multimedia Multicast (TM3)

NSTAC NGN for NSEP IPoS VoIP xxoIP Support for Gig-E

Networks

23

WWWTIAONLINEORGCIP

THANK YOU

Contacts Dan Bartdbarttiaonlineorg+17039077703

ANSI HSSP Matt Deanemdeaneansiorg

  • State and Local Emergency Needs Standards Training Exercises Strategic Planning and New Infrastructure Requirements STANDARDS Dan Bart TIA Co-Chair ANSI HSSP December 13 2005
  • Slide 7
  • Update on Activities of the ANSI Homeland Security Standards Panel
  • THANK YOU Contacts Dan Bart dbarttiaonlineorg +17039077703 ANSI HSSP Matt Deane mdeaneansiorg
Page 9: State and Local Emergency Needs: Standards, Training, Exercises, Strategic Planning, and New Infrastructure Requirements STANDARDS Dan Bart, TIA Co-Chair.

9

Homeland Security Standards Database wwwhssdus

Update on Activities of the ANSI Homeland Security

Standards Panel

11

Background Standards Coordination Needed

The National Strategy for Homeland Security (2002) identified the need for standards to support homeland security (HS) and emergency preparedness ndash Fourteen critical infrastructure areas were noted

January 2 2003 Report for Congress stated ndash ldquoNeither the federal government nor the nongovernmental

sector presently has a comprehensive consolidated program for developing new preparedness standardsrdquo

12

Response ANSI-HSSP February 5 2003 Formation of ANSI-HSSP

announced Facilitate the identification of existing and

development and enhancement of new homeland security standards

Examine role for conformity assessment activities

Serve as privatepublic sector forum for standards issues that cut cross-sector ndash A partnership Co-Chairs provided by industry and government

13

ANSI-HSSP Structure Led by ANSI-HSSP Co-Chairs Steering Committeendash Comprised of Government Agencies ANSI SDOs non-

ANSI SDOs and Companies (ANSI members and non-ANSI)

ndash Acts as US TAG to ISO SAG

Full Panel Approximately 100 organizational participants

Workshops utilized to address specific HS standards areas

14

ANSI-HSSP Participation Participation on the HSSP is open to all affected

interests (ANSI and non-ANSI members) includingndash Federal State and Local governmentsndash Industry representativesndash Trade Associations and Professional Societiesndash Standards Developers (ANSI and non-ANSI)ndash ForaConsortiandash Academiandash Consumer interests

15

Activities since Plenary in 2004 A plenary meeting was held September 2005 Published final report from workshop on Biological and

Chemical Threat Agents Launched workshop on standardization for Enterprise Power

Security and Continuity Launched workshop on Perimeter Security standardization Held final meeting of the workshop on standardization for

Training Programs for First Response to WMD events ANSI completed the Homeland Security Standards Database

(HSSD) which includes input from previous HSSP workshops convened

Partner with homeland security efforts such as DHS National Preparedness Month NCSP NGATS Security IPT etc

16

ANSI-HSSP Activities Going Forward

Emergency Communications workshop to meet December 14 and 15 at NIST Gaithersburgndash October meeting cancelled due to Katrina

Final report of Training Programs workshop being finalized

Task groups working in Power Security and Perimeter Security areas

Steering Committee to provide input to ISOIEC Strategic Advisory Group (SAG) on Security

Continue to examine potential new areas for workshops

17

Types of Emergency Communications

IndividualOrganization-to-IndividualOrganization ndash A citizen communicating an emergency to another citizen or private organization via available options

[eg ON-STAR-like message amateur radio mobile and land-line communications (eg CMRS FRS GMRS CB etc) broadcast and mass media Internet email lists faxes information services and word of mouth] Includes employer-to-employee and employer-to-employer emergency communications

ndash Includes Employer-to-Employee and Employer-to-Employer

IndividualOrganization-to-Governmentndash A citizen communicating an emergency message to appropriate authorities via available options (eg E9-

1-11-1-2 call to Public Safety Answering Point (PSAP) call to HSOC amateur radio and mobile communications (with or without location services)

Government-to-IndividualOrganizationndash Government or authorized officials communicating alerts or details of an emergency to citizens via

available options (eg Governmental mass media alerts citizen accessible radio services and common channels highway alerts voluntary citizen alert services [localized and national] e-mailvoice-mail and word of mouth)

Government-to-Government ndash Governmental authorities communicating to each other other agencies and appropriate National

Security Emergency Preparedness (NSEP)-designated private industry concerns and coordinators (ie using all forms of telecommunications services private radio Commercial Mobile Radio Services (CMRS) e-mailmessaging alerts etc)

18

WWWTIAONLINEORG

19

Introduction to TIA

Trade organization and Standards Development Organization (SDO) serving the communications and information technology industry

Three primary activitiesndash Standards developmentndash Trade shows marketingndash Global public policy

20

Introduction to TIA TIA is accredited by the American National Standards

Institute (ANSI) as a Standards Development Organization (SDO)

The 5th largest ANSI SDO measured by number of American National Standards

Over 1000 published specifications and standards TIA standards activities began in the 1920rsquos

ndash One Committee TR-8 meeting continuously since 1944

ndash This Committee works on interoperability standards for Public Safety users narrowband wideband and broadband

21

TIA HS Leadership Sector Coordinator PDD-63

and HSPD-7 Member NCC ISAC Steering Committee of

Comm SCC Sector Lead to PCIS and

Secretary Treasurer of PCIS Co-Chair ANSI HSSP Advisory Committee of

National Public Safety Telecommunications Council (NPSTC)

Participate on WGs of NSTAC and NIAC

Steering Committee of NCSP

Participate in DOCNTIA Economic Security WG

Executive Board of NIUSR Advisory Committee of

DHS SAFECOM FCC PS National

Coordination Committee (NCC)

FCC NRIC

22

TIA HS Standards Project 25 and MESA

ndash Mobility for Emergency and Safety Applications

ndash Narrowband wideband and broadband

cdma2000reg standards for IMT-2000

Wireless Priority Service (WPS)

Lawfully Authorized Electronic Surveillance (LAES)ndash Lead SDO supporting

CALEA

E-911 and Location-based standards

Terrestrial Mobile Multimedia Multicast (TM3)

NSTAC NGN for NSEP IPoS VoIP xxoIP Support for Gig-E

Networks

23

WWWTIAONLINEORGCIP

THANK YOU

Contacts Dan Bartdbarttiaonlineorg+17039077703

ANSI HSSP Matt Deanemdeaneansiorg

  • State and Local Emergency Needs Standards Training Exercises Strategic Planning and New Infrastructure Requirements STANDARDS Dan Bart TIA Co-Chair ANSI HSSP December 13 2005
  • Slide 7
  • Update on Activities of the ANSI Homeland Security Standards Panel
  • THANK YOU Contacts Dan Bart dbarttiaonlineorg +17039077703 ANSI HSSP Matt Deane mdeaneansiorg
Page 10: State and Local Emergency Needs: Standards, Training, Exercises, Strategic Planning, and New Infrastructure Requirements STANDARDS Dan Bart, TIA Co-Chair.

Update on Activities of the ANSI Homeland Security

Standards Panel

11

Background Standards Coordination Needed

The National Strategy for Homeland Security (2002) identified the need for standards to support homeland security (HS) and emergency preparedness ndash Fourteen critical infrastructure areas were noted

January 2 2003 Report for Congress stated ndash ldquoNeither the federal government nor the nongovernmental

sector presently has a comprehensive consolidated program for developing new preparedness standardsrdquo

12

Response ANSI-HSSP February 5 2003 Formation of ANSI-HSSP

announced Facilitate the identification of existing and

development and enhancement of new homeland security standards

Examine role for conformity assessment activities

Serve as privatepublic sector forum for standards issues that cut cross-sector ndash A partnership Co-Chairs provided by industry and government

13

ANSI-HSSP Structure Led by ANSI-HSSP Co-Chairs Steering Committeendash Comprised of Government Agencies ANSI SDOs non-

ANSI SDOs and Companies (ANSI members and non-ANSI)

ndash Acts as US TAG to ISO SAG

Full Panel Approximately 100 organizational participants

Workshops utilized to address specific HS standards areas

14

ANSI-HSSP Participation Participation on the HSSP is open to all affected

interests (ANSI and non-ANSI members) includingndash Federal State and Local governmentsndash Industry representativesndash Trade Associations and Professional Societiesndash Standards Developers (ANSI and non-ANSI)ndash ForaConsortiandash Academiandash Consumer interests

15

Activities since Plenary in 2004 A plenary meeting was held September 2005 Published final report from workshop on Biological and

Chemical Threat Agents Launched workshop on standardization for Enterprise Power

Security and Continuity Launched workshop on Perimeter Security standardization Held final meeting of the workshop on standardization for

Training Programs for First Response to WMD events ANSI completed the Homeland Security Standards Database

(HSSD) which includes input from previous HSSP workshops convened

Partner with homeland security efforts such as DHS National Preparedness Month NCSP NGATS Security IPT etc

16

ANSI-HSSP Activities Going Forward

Emergency Communications workshop to meet December 14 and 15 at NIST Gaithersburgndash October meeting cancelled due to Katrina

Final report of Training Programs workshop being finalized

Task groups working in Power Security and Perimeter Security areas

Steering Committee to provide input to ISOIEC Strategic Advisory Group (SAG) on Security

Continue to examine potential new areas for workshops

17

Types of Emergency Communications

IndividualOrganization-to-IndividualOrganization ndash A citizen communicating an emergency to another citizen or private organization via available options

[eg ON-STAR-like message amateur radio mobile and land-line communications (eg CMRS FRS GMRS CB etc) broadcast and mass media Internet email lists faxes information services and word of mouth] Includes employer-to-employee and employer-to-employer emergency communications

ndash Includes Employer-to-Employee and Employer-to-Employer

IndividualOrganization-to-Governmentndash A citizen communicating an emergency message to appropriate authorities via available options (eg E9-

1-11-1-2 call to Public Safety Answering Point (PSAP) call to HSOC amateur radio and mobile communications (with or without location services)

Government-to-IndividualOrganizationndash Government or authorized officials communicating alerts or details of an emergency to citizens via

available options (eg Governmental mass media alerts citizen accessible radio services and common channels highway alerts voluntary citizen alert services [localized and national] e-mailvoice-mail and word of mouth)

Government-to-Government ndash Governmental authorities communicating to each other other agencies and appropriate National

Security Emergency Preparedness (NSEP)-designated private industry concerns and coordinators (ie using all forms of telecommunications services private radio Commercial Mobile Radio Services (CMRS) e-mailmessaging alerts etc)

18

WWWTIAONLINEORG

19

Introduction to TIA

Trade organization and Standards Development Organization (SDO) serving the communications and information technology industry

Three primary activitiesndash Standards developmentndash Trade shows marketingndash Global public policy

20

Introduction to TIA TIA is accredited by the American National Standards

Institute (ANSI) as a Standards Development Organization (SDO)

The 5th largest ANSI SDO measured by number of American National Standards

Over 1000 published specifications and standards TIA standards activities began in the 1920rsquos

ndash One Committee TR-8 meeting continuously since 1944

ndash This Committee works on interoperability standards for Public Safety users narrowband wideband and broadband

21

TIA HS Leadership Sector Coordinator PDD-63

and HSPD-7 Member NCC ISAC Steering Committee of

Comm SCC Sector Lead to PCIS and

Secretary Treasurer of PCIS Co-Chair ANSI HSSP Advisory Committee of

National Public Safety Telecommunications Council (NPSTC)

Participate on WGs of NSTAC and NIAC

Steering Committee of NCSP

Participate in DOCNTIA Economic Security WG

Executive Board of NIUSR Advisory Committee of

DHS SAFECOM FCC PS National

Coordination Committee (NCC)

FCC NRIC

22

TIA HS Standards Project 25 and MESA

ndash Mobility for Emergency and Safety Applications

ndash Narrowband wideband and broadband

cdma2000reg standards for IMT-2000

Wireless Priority Service (WPS)

Lawfully Authorized Electronic Surveillance (LAES)ndash Lead SDO supporting

CALEA

E-911 and Location-based standards

Terrestrial Mobile Multimedia Multicast (TM3)

NSTAC NGN for NSEP IPoS VoIP xxoIP Support for Gig-E

Networks

23

WWWTIAONLINEORGCIP

THANK YOU

Contacts Dan Bartdbarttiaonlineorg+17039077703

ANSI HSSP Matt Deanemdeaneansiorg

  • State and Local Emergency Needs Standards Training Exercises Strategic Planning and New Infrastructure Requirements STANDARDS Dan Bart TIA Co-Chair ANSI HSSP December 13 2005
  • Slide 7
  • Update on Activities of the ANSI Homeland Security Standards Panel
  • THANK YOU Contacts Dan Bart dbarttiaonlineorg +17039077703 ANSI HSSP Matt Deane mdeaneansiorg
Page 11: State and Local Emergency Needs: Standards, Training, Exercises, Strategic Planning, and New Infrastructure Requirements STANDARDS Dan Bart, TIA Co-Chair.

11

Background Standards Coordination Needed

The National Strategy for Homeland Security (2002) identified the need for standards to support homeland security (HS) and emergency preparedness ndash Fourteen critical infrastructure areas were noted

January 2 2003 Report for Congress stated ndash ldquoNeither the federal government nor the nongovernmental

sector presently has a comprehensive consolidated program for developing new preparedness standardsrdquo

12

Response ANSI-HSSP February 5 2003 Formation of ANSI-HSSP

announced Facilitate the identification of existing and

development and enhancement of new homeland security standards

Examine role for conformity assessment activities

Serve as privatepublic sector forum for standards issues that cut cross-sector ndash A partnership Co-Chairs provided by industry and government

13

ANSI-HSSP Structure Led by ANSI-HSSP Co-Chairs Steering Committeendash Comprised of Government Agencies ANSI SDOs non-

ANSI SDOs and Companies (ANSI members and non-ANSI)

ndash Acts as US TAG to ISO SAG

Full Panel Approximately 100 organizational participants

Workshops utilized to address specific HS standards areas

14

ANSI-HSSP Participation Participation on the HSSP is open to all affected

interests (ANSI and non-ANSI members) includingndash Federal State and Local governmentsndash Industry representativesndash Trade Associations and Professional Societiesndash Standards Developers (ANSI and non-ANSI)ndash ForaConsortiandash Academiandash Consumer interests

15

Activities since Plenary in 2004 A plenary meeting was held September 2005 Published final report from workshop on Biological and

Chemical Threat Agents Launched workshop on standardization for Enterprise Power

Security and Continuity Launched workshop on Perimeter Security standardization Held final meeting of the workshop on standardization for

Training Programs for First Response to WMD events ANSI completed the Homeland Security Standards Database

(HSSD) which includes input from previous HSSP workshops convened

Partner with homeland security efforts such as DHS National Preparedness Month NCSP NGATS Security IPT etc

16

ANSI-HSSP Activities Going Forward

Emergency Communications workshop to meet December 14 and 15 at NIST Gaithersburgndash October meeting cancelled due to Katrina

Final report of Training Programs workshop being finalized

Task groups working in Power Security and Perimeter Security areas

Steering Committee to provide input to ISOIEC Strategic Advisory Group (SAG) on Security

Continue to examine potential new areas for workshops

17

Types of Emergency Communications

IndividualOrganization-to-IndividualOrganization ndash A citizen communicating an emergency to another citizen or private organization via available options

[eg ON-STAR-like message amateur radio mobile and land-line communications (eg CMRS FRS GMRS CB etc) broadcast and mass media Internet email lists faxes information services and word of mouth] Includes employer-to-employee and employer-to-employer emergency communications

ndash Includes Employer-to-Employee and Employer-to-Employer

IndividualOrganization-to-Governmentndash A citizen communicating an emergency message to appropriate authorities via available options (eg E9-

1-11-1-2 call to Public Safety Answering Point (PSAP) call to HSOC amateur radio and mobile communications (with or without location services)

Government-to-IndividualOrganizationndash Government or authorized officials communicating alerts or details of an emergency to citizens via

available options (eg Governmental mass media alerts citizen accessible radio services and common channels highway alerts voluntary citizen alert services [localized and national] e-mailvoice-mail and word of mouth)

Government-to-Government ndash Governmental authorities communicating to each other other agencies and appropriate National

Security Emergency Preparedness (NSEP)-designated private industry concerns and coordinators (ie using all forms of telecommunications services private radio Commercial Mobile Radio Services (CMRS) e-mailmessaging alerts etc)

18

WWWTIAONLINEORG

19

Introduction to TIA

Trade organization and Standards Development Organization (SDO) serving the communications and information technology industry

Three primary activitiesndash Standards developmentndash Trade shows marketingndash Global public policy

20

Introduction to TIA TIA is accredited by the American National Standards

Institute (ANSI) as a Standards Development Organization (SDO)

The 5th largest ANSI SDO measured by number of American National Standards

Over 1000 published specifications and standards TIA standards activities began in the 1920rsquos

ndash One Committee TR-8 meeting continuously since 1944

ndash This Committee works on interoperability standards for Public Safety users narrowband wideband and broadband

21

TIA HS Leadership Sector Coordinator PDD-63

and HSPD-7 Member NCC ISAC Steering Committee of

Comm SCC Sector Lead to PCIS and

Secretary Treasurer of PCIS Co-Chair ANSI HSSP Advisory Committee of

National Public Safety Telecommunications Council (NPSTC)

Participate on WGs of NSTAC and NIAC

Steering Committee of NCSP

Participate in DOCNTIA Economic Security WG

Executive Board of NIUSR Advisory Committee of

DHS SAFECOM FCC PS National

Coordination Committee (NCC)

FCC NRIC

22

TIA HS Standards Project 25 and MESA

ndash Mobility for Emergency and Safety Applications

ndash Narrowband wideband and broadband

cdma2000reg standards for IMT-2000

Wireless Priority Service (WPS)

Lawfully Authorized Electronic Surveillance (LAES)ndash Lead SDO supporting

CALEA

E-911 and Location-based standards

Terrestrial Mobile Multimedia Multicast (TM3)

NSTAC NGN for NSEP IPoS VoIP xxoIP Support for Gig-E

Networks

23

WWWTIAONLINEORGCIP

THANK YOU

Contacts Dan Bartdbarttiaonlineorg+17039077703

ANSI HSSP Matt Deanemdeaneansiorg

  • State and Local Emergency Needs Standards Training Exercises Strategic Planning and New Infrastructure Requirements STANDARDS Dan Bart TIA Co-Chair ANSI HSSP December 13 2005
  • Slide 7
  • Update on Activities of the ANSI Homeland Security Standards Panel
  • THANK YOU Contacts Dan Bart dbarttiaonlineorg +17039077703 ANSI HSSP Matt Deane mdeaneansiorg
Page 12: State and Local Emergency Needs: Standards, Training, Exercises, Strategic Planning, and New Infrastructure Requirements STANDARDS Dan Bart, TIA Co-Chair.

12

Response ANSI-HSSP February 5 2003 Formation of ANSI-HSSP

announced Facilitate the identification of existing and

development and enhancement of new homeland security standards

Examine role for conformity assessment activities

Serve as privatepublic sector forum for standards issues that cut cross-sector ndash A partnership Co-Chairs provided by industry and government

13

ANSI-HSSP Structure Led by ANSI-HSSP Co-Chairs Steering Committeendash Comprised of Government Agencies ANSI SDOs non-

ANSI SDOs and Companies (ANSI members and non-ANSI)

ndash Acts as US TAG to ISO SAG

Full Panel Approximately 100 organizational participants

Workshops utilized to address specific HS standards areas

14

ANSI-HSSP Participation Participation on the HSSP is open to all affected

interests (ANSI and non-ANSI members) includingndash Federal State and Local governmentsndash Industry representativesndash Trade Associations and Professional Societiesndash Standards Developers (ANSI and non-ANSI)ndash ForaConsortiandash Academiandash Consumer interests

15

Activities since Plenary in 2004 A plenary meeting was held September 2005 Published final report from workshop on Biological and

Chemical Threat Agents Launched workshop on standardization for Enterprise Power

Security and Continuity Launched workshop on Perimeter Security standardization Held final meeting of the workshop on standardization for

Training Programs for First Response to WMD events ANSI completed the Homeland Security Standards Database

(HSSD) which includes input from previous HSSP workshops convened

Partner with homeland security efforts such as DHS National Preparedness Month NCSP NGATS Security IPT etc

16

ANSI-HSSP Activities Going Forward

Emergency Communications workshop to meet December 14 and 15 at NIST Gaithersburgndash October meeting cancelled due to Katrina

Final report of Training Programs workshop being finalized

Task groups working in Power Security and Perimeter Security areas

Steering Committee to provide input to ISOIEC Strategic Advisory Group (SAG) on Security

Continue to examine potential new areas for workshops

17

Types of Emergency Communications

IndividualOrganization-to-IndividualOrganization ndash A citizen communicating an emergency to another citizen or private organization via available options

[eg ON-STAR-like message amateur radio mobile and land-line communications (eg CMRS FRS GMRS CB etc) broadcast and mass media Internet email lists faxes information services and word of mouth] Includes employer-to-employee and employer-to-employer emergency communications

ndash Includes Employer-to-Employee and Employer-to-Employer

IndividualOrganization-to-Governmentndash A citizen communicating an emergency message to appropriate authorities via available options (eg E9-

1-11-1-2 call to Public Safety Answering Point (PSAP) call to HSOC amateur radio and mobile communications (with or without location services)

Government-to-IndividualOrganizationndash Government or authorized officials communicating alerts or details of an emergency to citizens via

available options (eg Governmental mass media alerts citizen accessible radio services and common channels highway alerts voluntary citizen alert services [localized and national] e-mailvoice-mail and word of mouth)

Government-to-Government ndash Governmental authorities communicating to each other other agencies and appropriate National

Security Emergency Preparedness (NSEP)-designated private industry concerns and coordinators (ie using all forms of telecommunications services private radio Commercial Mobile Radio Services (CMRS) e-mailmessaging alerts etc)

18

WWWTIAONLINEORG

19

Introduction to TIA

Trade organization and Standards Development Organization (SDO) serving the communications and information technology industry

Three primary activitiesndash Standards developmentndash Trade shows marketingndash Global public policy

20

Introduction to TIA TIA is accredited by the American National Standards

Institute (ANSI) as a Standards Development Organization (SDO)

The 5th largest ANSI SDO measured by number of American National Standards

Over 1000 published specifications and standards TIA standards activities began in the 1920rsquos

ndash One Committee TR-8 meeting continuously since 1944

ndash This Committee works on interoperability standards for Public Safety users narrowband wideband and broadband

21

TIA HS Leadership Sector Coordinator PDD-63

and HSPD-7 Member NCC ISAC Steering Committee of

Comm SCC Sector Lead to PCIS and

Secretary Treasurer of PCIS Co-Chair ANSI HSSP Advisory Committee of

National Public Safety Telecommunications Council (NPSTC)

Participate on WGs of NSTAC and NIAC

Steering Committee of NCSP

Participate in DOCNTIA Economic Security WG

Executive Board of NIUSR Advisory Committee of

DHS SAFECOM FCC PS National

Coordination Committee (NCC)

FCC NRIC

22

TIA HS Standards Project 25 and MESA

ndash Mobility for Emergency and Safety Applications

ndash Narrowband wideband and broadband

cdma2000reg standards for IMT-2000

Wireless Priority Service (WPS)

Lawfully Authorized Electronic Surveillance (LAES)ndash Lead SDO supporting

CALEA

E-911 and Location-based standards

Terrestrial Mobile Multimedia Multicast (TM3)

NSTAC NGN for NSEP IPoS VoIP xxoIP Support for Gig-E

Networks

23

WWWTIAONLINEORGCIP

THANK YOU

Contacts Dan Bartdbarttiaonlineorg+17039077703

ANSI HSSP Matt Deanemdeaneansiorg

  • State and Local Emergency Needs Standards Training Exercises Strategic Planning and New Infrastructure Requirements STANDARDS Dan Bart TIA Co-Chair ANSI HSSP December 13 2005
  • Slide 7
  • Update on Activities of the ANSI Homeland Security Standards Panel
  • THANK YOU Contacts Dan Bart dbarttiaonlineorg +17039077703 ANSI HSSP Matt Deane mdeaneansiorg
Page 13: State and Local Emergency Needs: Standards, Training, Exercises, Strategic Planning, and New Infrastructure Requirements STANDARDS Dan Bart, TIA Co-Chair.

13

ANSI-HSSP Structure Led by ANSI-HSSP Co-Chairs Steering Committeendash Comprised of Government Agencies ANSI SDOs non-

ANSI SDOs and Companies (ANSI members and non-ANSI)

ndash Acts as US TAG to ISO SAG

Full Panel Approximately 100 organizational participants

Workshops utilized to address specific HS standards areas

14

ANSI-HSSP Participation Participation on the HSSP is open to all affected

interests (ANSI and non-ANSI members) includingndash Federal State and Local governmentsndash Industry representativesndash Trade Associations and Professional Societiesndash Standards Developers (ANSI and non-ANSI)ndash ForaConsortiandash Academiandash Consumer interests

15

Activities since Plenary in 2004 A plenary meeting was held September 2005 Published final report from workshop on Biological and

Chemical Threat Agents Launched workshop on standardization for Enterprise Power

Security and Continuity Launched workshop on Perimeter Security standardization Held final meeting of the workshop on standardization for

Training Programs for First Response to WMD events ANSI completed the Homeland Security Standards Database

(HSSD) which includes input from previous HSSP workshops convened

Partner with homeland security efforts such as DHS National Preparedness Month NCSP NGATS Security IPT etc

16

ANSI-HSSP Activities Going Forward

Emergency Communications workshop to meet December 14 and 15 at NIST Gaithersburgndash October meeting cancelled due to Katrina

Final report of Training Programs workshop being finalized

Task groups working in Power Security and Perimeter Security areas

Steering Committee to provide input to ISOIEC Strategic Advisory Group (SAG) on Security

Continue to examine potential new areas for workshops

17

Types of Emergency Communications

IndividualOrganization-to-IndividualOrganization ndash A citizen communicating an emergency to another citizen or private organization via available options

[eg ON-STAR-like message amateur radio mobile and land-line communications (eg CMRS FRS GMRS CB etc) broadcast and mass media Internet email lists faxes information services and word of mouth] Includes employer-to-employee and employer-to-employer emergency communications

ndash Includes Employer-to-Employee and Employer-to-Employer

IndividualOrganization-to-Governmentndash A citizen communicating an emergency message to appropriate authorities via available options (eg E9-

1-11-1-2 call to Public Safety Answering Point (PSAP) call to HSOC amateur radio and mobile communications (with or without location services)

Government-to-IndividualOrganizationndash Government or authorized officials communicating alerts or details of an emergency to citizens via

available options (eg Governmental mass media alerts citizen accessible radio services and common channels highway alerts voluntary citizen alert services [localized and national] e-mailvoice-mail and word of mouth)

Government-to-Government ndash Governmental authorities communicating to each other other agencies and appropriate National

Security Emergency Preparedness (NSEP)-designated private industry concerns and coordinators (ie using all forms of telecommunications services private radio Commercial Mobile Radio Services (CMRS) e-mailmessaging alerts etc)

18

WWWTIAONLINEORG

19

Introduction to TIA

Trade organization and Standards Development Organization (SDO) serving the communications and information technology industry

Three primary activitiesndash Standards developmentndash Trade shows marketingndash Global public policy

20

Introduction to TIA TIA is accredited by the American National Standards

Institute (ANSI) as a Standards Development Organization (SDO)

The 5th largest ANSI SDO measured by number of American National Standards

Over 1000 published specifications and standards TIA standards activities began in the 1920rsquos

ndash One Committee TR-8 meeting continuously since 1944

ndash This Committee works on interoperability standards for Public Safety users narrowband wideband and broadband

21

TIA HS Leadership Sector Coordinator PDD-63

and HSPD-7 Member NCC ISAC Steering Committee of

Comm SCC Sector Lead to PCIS and

Secretary Treasurer of PCIS Co-Chair ANSI HSSP Advisory Committee of

National Public Safety Telecommunications Council (NPSTC)

Participate on WGs of NSTAC and NIAC

Steering Committee of NCSP

Participate in DOCNTIA Economic Security WG

Executive Board of NIUSR Advisory Committee of

DHS SAFECOM FCC PS National

Coordination Committee (NCC)

FCC NRIC

22

TIA HS Standards Project 25 and MESA

ndash Mobility for Emergency and Safety Applications

ndash Narrowband wideband and broadband

cdma2000reg standards for IMT-2000

Wireless Priority Service (WPS)

Lawfully Authorized Electronic Surveillance (LAES)ndash Lead SDO supporting

CALEA

E-911 and Location-based standards

Terrestrial Mobile Multimedia Multicast (TM3)

NSTAC NGN for NSEP IPoS VoIP xxoIP Support for Gig-E

Networks

23

WWWTIAONLINEORGCIP

THANK YOU

Contacts Dan Bartdbarttiaonlineorg+17039077703

ANSI HSSP Matt Deanemdeaneansiorg

  • State and Local Emergency Needs Standards Training Exercises Strategic Planning and New Infrastructure Requirements STANDARDS Dan Bart TIA Co-Chair ANSI HSSP December 13 2005
  • Slide 7
  • Update on Activities of the ANSI Homeland Security Standards Panel
  • THANK YOU Contacts Dan Bart dbarttiaonlineorg +17039077703 ANSI HSSP Matt Deane mdeaneansiorg
Page 14: State and Local Emergency Needs: Standards, Training, Exercises, Strategic Planning, and New Infrastructure Requirements STANDARDS Dan Bart, TIA Co-Chair.

14

ANSI-HSSP Participation Participation on the HSSP is open to all affected

interests (ANSI and non-ANSI members) includingndash Federal State and Local governmentsndash Industry representativesndash Trade Associations and Professional Societiesndash Standards Developers (ANSI and non-ANSI)ndash ForaConsortiandash Academiandash Consumer interests

15

Activities since Plenary in 2004 A plenary meeting was held September 2005 Published final report from workshop on Biological and

Chemical Threat Agents Launched workshop on standardization for Enterprise Power

Security and Continuity Launched workshop on Perimeter Security standardization Held final meeting of the workshop on standardization for

Training Programs for First Response to WMD events ANSI completed the Homeland Security Standards Database

(HSSD) which includes input from previous HSSP workshops convened

Partner with homeland security efforts such as DHS National Preparedness Month NCSP NGATS Security IPT etc

16

ANSI-HSSP Activities Going Forward

Emergency Communications workshop to meet December 14 and 15 at NIST Gaithersburgndash October meeting cancelled due to Katrina

Final report of Training Programs workshop being finalized

Task groups working in Power Security and Perimeter Security areas

Steering Committee to provide input to ISOIEC Strategic Advisory Group (SAG) on Security

Continue to examine potential new areas for workshops

17

Types of Emergency Communications

IndividualOrganization-to-IndividualOrganization ndash A citizen communicating an emergency to another citizen or private organization via available options

[eg ON-STAR-like message amateur radio mobile and land-line communications (eg CMRS FRS GMRS CB etc) broadcast and mass media Internet email lists faxes information services and word of mouth] Includes employer-to-employee and employer-to-employer emergency communications

ndash Includes Employer-to-Employee and Employer-to-Employer

IndividualOrganization-to-Governmentndash A citizen communicating an emergency message to appropriate authorities via available options (eg E9-

1-11-1-2 call to Public Safety Answering Point (PSAP) call to HSOC amateur radio and mobile communications (with or without location services)

Government-to-IndividualOrganizationndash Government or authorized officials communicating alerts or details of an emergency to citizens via

available options (eg Governmental mass media alerts citizen accessible radio services and common channels highway alerts voluntary citizen alert services [localized and national] e-mailvoice-mail and word of mouth)

Government-to-Government ndash Governmental authorities communicating to each other other agencies and appropriate National

Security Emergency Preparedness (NSEP)-designated private industry concerns and coordinators (ie using all forms of telecommunications services private radio Commercial Mobile Radio Services (CMRS) e-mailmessaging alerts etc)

18

WWWTIAONLINEORG

19

Introduction to TIA

Trade organization and Standards Development Organization (SDO) serving the communications and information technology industry

Three primary activitiesndash Standards developmentndash Trade shows marketingndash Global public policy

20

Introduction to TIA TIA is accredited by the American National Standards

Institute (ANSI) as a Standards Development Organization (SDO)

The 5th largest ANSI SDO measured by number of American National Standards

Over 1000 published specifications and standards TIA standards activities began in the 1920rsquos

ndash One Committee TR-8 meeting continuously since 1944

ndash This Committee works on interoperability standards for Public Safety users narrowband wideband and broadband

21

TIA HS Leadership Sector Coordinator PDD-63

and HSPD-7 Member NCC ISAC Steering Committee of

Comm SCC Sector Lead to PCIS and

Secretary Treasurer of PCIS Co-Chair ANSI HSSP Advisory Committee of

National Public Safety Telecommunications Council (NPSTC)

Participate on WGs of NSTAC and NIAC

Steering Committee of NCSP

Participate in DOCNTIA Economic Security WG

Executive Board of NIUSR Advisory Committee of

DHS SAFECOM FCC PS National

Coordination Committee (NCC)

FCC NRIC

22

TIA HS Standards Project 25 and MESA

ndash Mobility for Emergency and Safety Applications

ndash Narrowband wideband and broadband

cdma2000reg standards for IMT-2000

Wireless Priority Service (WPS)

Lawfully Authorized Electronic Surveillance (LAES)ndash Lead SDO supporting

CALEA

E-911 and Location-based standards

Terrestrial Mobile Multimedia Multicast (TM3)

NSTAC NGN for NSEP IPoS VoIP xxoIP Support for Gig-E

Networks

23

WWWTIAONLINEORGCIP

THANK YOU

Contacts Dan Bartdbarttiaonlineorg+17039077703

ANSI HSSP Matt Deanemdeaneansiorg

  • State and Local Emergency Needs Standards Training Exercises Strategic Planning and New Infrastructure Requirements STANDARDS Dan Bart TIA Co-Chair ANSI HSSP December 13 2005
  • Slide 7
  • Update on Activities of the ANSI Homeland Security Standards Panel
  • THANK YOU Contacts Dan Bart dbarttiaonlineorg +17039077703 ANSI HSSP Matt Deane mdeaneansiorg
Page 15: State and Local Emergency Needs: Standards, Training, Exercises, Strategic Planning, and New Infrastructure Requirements STANDARDS Dan Bart, TIA Co-Chair.

15

Activities since Plenary in 2004 A plenary meeting was held September 2005 Published final report from workshop on Biological and

Chemical Threat Agents Launched workshop on standardization for Enterprise Power

Security and Continuity Launched workshop on Perimeter Security standardization Held final meeting of the workshop on standardization for

Training Programs for First Response to WMD events ANSI completed the Homeland Security Standards Database

(HSSD) which includes input from previous HSSP workshops convened

Partner with homeland security efforts such as DHS National Preparedness Month NCSP NGATS Security IPT etc

16

ANSI-HSSP Activities Going Forward

Emergency Communications workshop to meet December 14 and 15 at NIST Gaithersburgndash October meeting cancelled due to Katrina

Final report of Training Programs workshop being finalized

Task groups working in Power Security and Perimeter Security areas

Steering Committee to provide input to ISOIEC Strategic Advisory Group (SAG) on Security

Continue to examine potential new areas for workshops

17

Types of Emergency Communications

IndividualOrganization-to-IndividualOrganization ndash A citizen communicating an emergency to another citizen or private organization via available options

[eg ON-STAR-like message amateur radio mobile and land-line communications (eg CMRS FRS GMRS CB etc) broadcast and mass media Internet email lists faxes information services and word of mouth] Includes employer-to-employee and employer-to-employer emergency communications

ndash Includes Employer-to-Employee and Employer-to-Employer

IndividualOrganization-to-Governmentndash A citizen communicating an emergency message to appropriate authorities via available options (eg E9-

1-11-1-2 call to Public Safety Answering Point (PSAP) call to HSOC amateur radio and mobile communications (with or without location services)

Government-to-IndividualOrganizationndash Government or authorized officials communicating alerts or details of an emergency to citizens via

available options (eg Governmental mass media alerts citizen accessible radio services and common channels highway alerts voluntary citizen alert services [localized and national] e-mailvoice-mail and word of mouth)

Government-to-Government ndash Governmental authorities communicating to each other other agencies and appropriate National

Security Emergency Preparedness (NSEP)-designated private industry concerns and coordinators (ie using all forms of telecommunications services private radio Commercial Mobile Radio Services (CMRS) e-mailmessaging alerts etc)

18

WWWTIAONLINEORG

19

Introduction to TIA

Trade organization and Standards Development Organization (SDO) serving the communications and information technology industry

Three primary activitiesndash Standards developmentndash Trade shows marketingndash Global public policy

20

Introduction to TIA TIA is accredited by the American National Standards

Institute (ANSI) as a Standards Development Organization (SDO)

The 5th largest ANSI SDO measured by number of American National Standards

Over 1000 published specifications and standards TIA standards activities began in the 1920rsquos

ndash One Committee TR-8 meeting continuously since 1944

ndash This Committee works on interoperability standards for Public Safety users narrowband wideband and broadband

21

TIA HS Leadership Sector Coordinator PDD-63

and HSPD-7 Member NCC ISAC Steering Committee of

Comm SCC Sector Lead to PCIS and

Secretary Treasurer of PCIS Co-Chair ANSI HSSP Advisory Committee of

National Public Safety Telecommunications Council (NPSTC)

Participate on WGs of NSTAC and NIAC

Steering Committee of NCSP

Participate in DOCNTIA Economic Security WG

Executive Board of NIUSR Advisory Committee of

DHS SAFECOM FCC PS National

Coordination Committee (NCC)

FCC NRIC

22

TIA HS Standards Project 25 and MESA

ndash Mobility for Emergency and Safety Applications

ndash Narrowband wideband and broadband

cdma2000reg standards for IMT-2000

Wireless Priority Service (WPS)

Lawfully Authorized Electronic Surveillance (LAES)ndash Lead SDO supporting

CALEA

E-911 and Location-based standards

Terrestrial Mobile Multimedia Multicast (TM3)

NSTAC NGN for NSEP IPoS VoIP xxoIP Support for Gig-E

Networks

23

WWWTIAONLINEORGCIP

THANK YOU

Contacts Dan Bartdbarttiaonlineorg+17039077703

ANSI HSSP Matt Deanemdeaneansiorg

  • State and Local Emergency Needs Standards Training Exercises Strategic Planning and New Infrastructure Requirements STANDARDS Dan Bart TIA Co-Chair ANSI HSSP December 13 2005
  • Slide 7
  • Update on Activities of the ANSI Homeland Security Standards Panel
  • THANK YOU Contacts Dan Bart dbarttiaonlineorg +17039077703 ANSI HSSP Matt Deane mdeaneansiorg
Page 16: State and Local Emergency Needs: Standards, Training, Exercises, Strategic Planning, and New Infrastructure Requirements STANDARDS Dan Bart, TIA Co-Chair.

16

ANSI-HSSP Activities Going Forward

Emergency Communications workshop to meet December 14 and 15 at NIST Gaithersburgndash October meeting cancelled due to Katrina

Final report of Training Programs workshop being finalized

Task groups working in Power Security and Perimeter Security areas

Steering Committee to provide input to ISOIEC Strategic Advisory Group (SAG) on Security

Continue to examine potential new areas for workshops

17

Types of Emergency Communications

IndividualOrganization-to-IndividualOrganization ndash A citizen communicating an emergency to another citizen or private organization via available options

[eg ON-STAR-like message amateur radio mobile and land-line communications (eg CMRS FRS GMRS CB etc) broadcast and mass media Internet email lists faxes information services and word of mouth] Includes employer-to-employee and employer-to-employer emergency communications

ndash Includes Employer-to-Employee and Employer-to-Employer

IndividualOrganization-to-Governmentndash A citizen communicating an emergency message to appropriate authorities via available options (eg E9-

1-11-1-2 call to Public Safety Answering Point (PSAP) call to HSOC amateur radio and mobile communications (with or without location services)

Government-to-IndividualOrganizationndash Government or authorized officials communicating alerts or details of an emergency to citizens via

available options (eg Governmental mass media alerts citizen accessible radio services and common channels highway alerts voluntary citizen alert services [localized and national] e-mailvoice-mail and word of mouth)

Government-to-Government ndash Governmental authorities communicating to each other other agencies and appropriate National

Security Emergency Preparedness (NSEP)-designated private industry concerns and coordinators (ie using all forms of telecommunications services private radio Commercial Mobile Radio Services (CMRS) e-mailmessaging alerts etc)

18

WWWTIAONLINEORG

19

Introduction to TIA

Trade organization and Standards Development Organization (SDO) serving the communications and information technology industry

Three primary activitiesndash Standards developmentndash Trade shows marketingndash Global public policy

20

Introduction to TIA TIA is accredited by the American National Standards

Institute (ANSI) as a Standards Development Organization (SDO)

The 5th largest ANSI SDO measured by number of American National Standards

Over 1000 published specifications and standards TIA standards activities began in the 1920rsquos

ndash One Committee TR-8 meeting continuously since 1944

ndash This Committee works on interoperability standards for Public Safety users narrowband wideband and broadband

21

TIA HS Leadership Sector Coordinator PDD-63

and HSPD-7 Member NCC ISAC Steering Committee of

Comm SCC Sector Lead to PCIS and

Secretary Treasurer of PCIS Co-Chair ANSI HSSP Advisory Committee of

National Public Safety Telecommunications Council (NPSTC)

Participate on WGs of NSTAC and NIAC

Steering Committee of NCSP

Participate in DOCNTIA Economic Security WG

Executive Board of NIUSR Advisory Committee of

DHS SAFECOM FCC PS National

Coordination Committee (NCC)

FCC NRIC

22

TIA HS Standards Project 25 and MESA

ndash Mobility for Emergency and Safety Applications

ndash Narrowband wideband and broadband

cdma2000reg standards for IMT-2000

Wireless Priority Service (WPS)

Lawfully Authorized Electronic Surveillance (LAES)ndash Lead SDO supporting

CALEA

E-911 and Location-based standards

Terrestrial Mobile Multimedia Multicast (TM3)

NSTAC NGN for NSEP IPoS VoIP xxoIP Support for Gig-E

Networks

23

WWWTIAONLINEORGCIP

THANK YOU

Contacts Dan Bartdbarttiaonlineorg+17039077703

ANSI HSSP Matt Deanemdeaneansiorg

  • State and Local Emergency Needs Standards Training Exercises Strategic Planning and New Infrastructure Requirements STANDARDS Dan Bart TIA Co-Chair ANSI HSSP December 13 2005
  • Slide 7
  • Update on Activities of the ANSI Homeland Security Standards Panel
  • THANK YOU Contacts Dan Bart dbarttiaonlineorg +17039077703 ANSI HSSP Matt Deane mdeaneansiorg
Page 17: State and Local Emergency Needs: Standards, Training, Exercises, Strategic Planning, and New Infrastructure Requirements STANDARDS Dan Bart, TIA Co-Chair.

17

Types of Emergency Communications

IndividualOrganization-to-IndividualOrganization ndash A citizen communicating an emergency to another citizen or private organization via available options

[eg ON-STAR-like message amateur radio mobile and land-line communications (eg CMRS FRS GMRS CB etc) broadcast and mass media Internet email lists faxes information services and word of mouth] Includes employer-to-employee and employer-to-employer emergency communications

ndash Includes Employer-to-Employee and Employer-to-Employer

IndividualOrganization-to-Governmentndash A citizen communicating an emergency message to appropriate authorities via available options (eg E9-

1-11-1-2 call to Public Safety Answering Point (PSAP) call to HSOC amateur radio and mobile communications (with or without location services)

Government-to-IndividualOrganizationndash Government or authorized officials communicating alerts or details of an emergency to citizens via

available options (eg Governmental mass media alerts citizen accessible radio services and common channels highway alerts voluntary citizen alert services [localized and national] e-mailvoice-mail and word of mouth)

Government-to-Government ndash Governmental authorities communicating to each other other agencies and appropriate National

Security Emergency Preparedness (NSEP)-designated private industry concerns and coordinators (ie using all forms of telecommunications services private radio Commercial Mobile Radio Services (CMRS) e-mailmessaging alerts etc)

18

WWWTIAONLINEORG

19

Introduction to TIA

Trade organization and Standards Development Organization (SDO) serving the communications and information technology industry

Three primary activitiesndash Standards developmentndash Trade shows marketingndash Global public policy

20

Introduction to TIA TIA is accredited by the American National Standards

Institute (ANSI) as a Standards Development Organization (SDO)

The 5th largest ANSI SDO measured by number of American National Standards

Over 1000 published specifications and standards TIA standards activities began in the 1920rsquos

ndash One Committee TR-8 meeting continuously since 1944

ndash This Committee works on interoperability standards for Public Safety users narrowband wideband and broadband

21

TIA HS Leadership Sector Coordinator PDD-63

and HSPD-7 Member NCC ISAC Steering Committee of

Comm SCC Sector Lead to PCIS and

Secretary Treasurer of PCIS Co-Chair ANSI HSSP Advisory Committee of

National Public Safety Telecommunications Council (NPSTC)

Participate on WGs of NSTAC and NIAC

Steering Committee of NCSP

Participate in DOCNTIA Economic Security WG

Executive Board of NIUSR Advisory Committee of

DHS SAFECOM FCC PS National

Coordination Committee (NCC)

FCC NRIC

22

TIA HS Standards Project 25 and MESA

ndash Mobility for Emergency and Safety Applications

ndash Narrowband wideband and broadband

cdma2000reg standards for IMT-2000

Wireless Priority Service (WPS)

Lawfully Authorized Electronic Surveillance (LAES)ndash Lead SDO supporting

CALEA

E-911 and Location-based standards

Terrestrial Mobile Multimedia Multicast (TM3)

NSTAC NGN for NSEP IPoS VoIP xxoIP Support for Gig-E

Networks

23

WWWTIAONLINEORGCIP

THANK YOU

Contacts Dan Bartdbarttiaonlineorg+17039077703

ANSI HSSP Matt Deanemdeaneansiorg

  • State and Local Emergency Needs Standards Training Exercises Strategic Planning and New Infrastructure Requirements STANDARDS Dan Bart TIA Co-Chair ANSI HSSP December 13 2005
  • Slide 7
  • Update on Activities of the ANSI Homeland Security Standards Panel
  • THANK YOU Contacts Dan Bart dbarttiaonlineorg +17039077703 ANSI HSSP Matt Deane mdeaneansiorg
Page 18: State and Local Emergency Needs: Standards, Training, Exercises, Strategic Planning, and New Infrastructure Requirements STANDARDS Dan Bart, TIA Co-Chair.

18

WWWTIAONLINEORG

19

Introduction to TIA

Trade organization and Standards Development Organization (SDO) serving the communications and information technology industry

Three primary activitiesndash Standards developmentndash Trade shows marketingndash Global public policy

20

Introduction to TIA TIA is accredited by the American National Standards

Institute (ANSI) as a Standards Development Organization (SDO)

The 5th largest ANSI SDO measured by number of American National Standards

Over 1000 published specifications and standards TIA standards activities began in the 1920rsquos

ndash One Committee TR-8 meeting continuously since 1944

ndash This Committee works on interoperability standards for Public Safety users narrowband wideband and broadband

21

TIA HS Leadership Sector Coordinator PDD-63

and HSPD-7 Member NCC ISAC Steering Committee of

Comm SCC Sector Lead to PCIS and

Secretary Treasurer of PCIS Co-Chair ANSI HSSP Advisory Committee of

National Public Safety Telecommunications Council (NPSTC)

Participate on WGs of NSTAC and NIAC

Steering Committee of NCSP

Participate in DOCNTIA Economic Security WG

Executive Board of NIUSR Advisory Committee of

DHS SAFECOM FCC PS National

Coordination Committee (NCC)

FCC NRIC

22

TIA HS Standards Project 25 and MESA

ndash Mobility for Emergency and Safety Applications

ndash Narrowband wideband and broadband

cdma2000reg standards for IMT-2000

Wireless Priority Service (WPS)

Lawfully Authorized Electronic Surveillance (LAES)ndash Lead SDO supporting

CALEA

E-911 and Location-based standards

Terrestrial Mobile Multimedia Multicast (TM3)

NSTAC NGN for NSEP IPoS VoIP xxoIP Support for Gig-E

Networks

23

WWWTIAONLINEORGCIP

THANK YOU

Contacts Dan Bartdbarttiaonlineorg+17039077703

ANSI HSSP Matt Deanemdeaneansiorg

  • State and Local Emergency Needs Standards Training Exercises Strategic Planning and New Infrastructure Requirements STANDARDS Dan Bart TIA Co-Chair ANSI HSSP December 13 2005
  • Slide 7
  • Update on Activities of the ANSI Homeland Security Standards Panel
  • THANK YOU Contacts Dan Bart dbarttiaonlineorg +17039077703 ANSI HSSP Matt Deane mdeaneansiorg
Page 19: State and Local Emergency Needs: Standards, Training, Exercises, Strategic Planning, and New Infrastructure Requirements STANDARDS Dan Bart, TIA Co-Chair.

19

Introduction to TIA

Trade organization and Standards Development Organization (SDO) serving the communications and information technology industry

Three primary activitiesndash Standards developmentndash Trade shows marketingndash Global public policy

20

Introduction to TIA TIA is accredited by the American National Standards

Institute (ANSI) as a Standards Development Organization (SDO)

The 5th largest ANSI SDO measured by number of American National Standards

Over 1000 published specifications and standards TIA standards activities began in the 1920rsquos

ndash One Committee TR-8 meeting continuously since 1944

ndash This Committee works on interoperability standards for Public Safety users narrowband wideband and broadband

21

TIA HS Leadership Sector Coordinator PDD-63

and HSPD-7 Member NCC ISAC Steering Committee of

Comm SCC Sector Lead to PCIS and

Secretary Treasurer of PCIS Co-Chair ANSI HSSP Advisory Committee of

National Public Safety Telecommunications Council (NPSTC)

Participate on WGs of NSTAC and NIAC

Steering Committee of NCSP

Participate in DOCNTIA Economic Security WG

Executive Board of NIUSR Advisory Committee of

DHS SAFECOM FCC PS National

Coordination Committee (NCC)

FCC NRIC

22

TIA HS Standards Project 25 and MESA

ndash Mobility for Emergency and Safety Applications

ndash Narrowband wideband and broadband

cdma2000reg standards for IMT-2000

Wireless Priority Service (WPS)

Lawfully Authorized Electronic Surveillance (LAES)ndash Lead SDO supporting

CALEA

E-911 and Location-based standards

Terrestrial Mobile Multimedia Multicast (TM3)

NSTAC NGN for NSEP IPoS VoIP xxoIP Support for Gig-E

Networks

23

WWWTIAONLINEORGCIP

THANK YOU

Contacts Dan Bartdbarttiaonlineorg+17039077703

ANSI HSSP Matt Deanemdeaneansiorg

  • State and Local Emergency Needs Standards Training Exercises Strategic Planning and New Infrastructure Requirements STANDARDS Dan Bart TIA Co-Chair ANSI HSSP December 13 2005
  • Slide 7
  • Update on Activities of the ANSI Homeland Security Standards Panel
  • THANK YOU Contacts Dan Bart dbarttiaonlineorg +17039077703 ANSI HSSP Matt Deane mdeaneansiorg
Page 20: State and Local Emergency Needs: Standards, Training, Exercises, Strategic Planning, and New Infrastructure Requirements STANDARDS Dan Bart, TIA Co-Chair.

20

Introduction to TIA TIA is accredited by the American National Standards

Institute (ANSI) as a Standards Development Organization (SDO)

The 5th largest ANSI SDO measured by number of American National Standards

Over 1000 published specifications and standards TIA standards activities began in the 1920rsquos

ndash One Committee TR-8 meeting continuously since 1944

ndash This Committee works on interoperability standards for Public Safety users narrowband wideband and broadband

21

TIA HS Leadership Sector Coordinator PDD-63

and HSPD-7 Member NCC ISAC Steering Committee of

Comm SCC Sector Lead to PCIS and

Secretary Treasurer of PCIS Co-Chair ANSI HSSP Advisory Committee of

National Public Safety Telecommunications Council (NPSTC)

Participate on WGs of NSTAC and NIAC

Steering Committee of NCSP

Participate in DOCNTIA Economic Security WG

Executive Board of NIUSR Advisory Committee of

DHS SAFECOM FCC PS National

Coordination Committee (NCC)

FCC NRIC

22

TIA HS Standards Project 25 and MESA

ndash Mobility for Emergency and Safety Applications

ndash Narrowband wideband and broadband

cdma2000reg standards for IMT-2000

Wireless Priority Service (WPS)

Lawfully Authorized Electronic Surveillance (LAES)ndash Lead SDO supporting

CALEA

E-911 and Location-based standards

Terrestrial Mobile Multimedia Multicast (TM3)

NSTAC NGN for NSEP IPoS VoIP xxoIP Support for Gig-E

Networks

23

WWWTIAONLINEORGCIP

THANK YOU

Contacts Dan Bartdbarttiaonlineorg+17039077703

ANSI HSSP Matt Deanemdeaneansiorg

  • State and Local Emergency Needs Standards Training Exercises Strategic Planning and New Infrastructure Requirements STANDARDS Dan Bart TIA Co-Chair ANSI HSSP December 13 2005
  • Slide 7
  • Update on Activities of the ANSI Homeland Security Standards Panel
  • THANK YOU Contacts Dan Bart dbarttiaonlineorg +17039077703 ANSI HSSP Matt Deane mdeaneansiorg
Page 21: State and Local Emergency Needs: Standards, Training, Exercises, Strategic Planning, and New Infrastructure Requirements STANDARDS Dan Bart, TIA Co-Chair.

21

TIA HS Leadership Sector Coordinator PDD-63

and HSPD-7 Member NCC ISAC Steering Committee of

Comm SCC Sector Lead to PCIS and

Secretary Treasurer of PCIS Co-Chair ANSI HSSP Advisory Committee of

National Public Safety Telecommunications Council (NPSTC)

Participate on WGs of NSTAC and NIAC

Steering Committee of NCSP

Participate in DOCNTIA Economic Security WG

Executive Board of NIUSR Advisory Committee of

DHS SAFECOM FCC PS National

Coordination Committee (NCC)

FCC NRIC

22

TIA HS Standards Project 25 and MESA

ndash Mobility for Emergency and Safety Applications

ndash Narrowband wideband and broadband

cdma2000reg standards for IMT-2000

Wireless Priority Service (WPS)

Lawfully Authorized Electronic Surveillance (LAES)ndash Lead SDO supporting

CALEA

E-911 and Location-based standards

Terrestrial Mobile Multimedia Multicast (TM3)

NSTAC NGN for NSEP IPoS VoIP xxoIP Support for Gig-E

Networks

23

WWWTIAONLINEORGCIP

THANK YOU

Contacts Dan Bartdbarttiaonlineorg+17039077703

ANSI HSSP Matt Deanemdeaneansiorg

  • State and Local Emergency Needs Standards Training Exercises Strategic Planning and New Infrastructure Requirements STANDARDS Dan Bart TIA Co-Chair ANSI HSSP December 13 2005
  • Slide 7
  • Update on Activities of the ANSI Homeland Security Standards Panel
  • THANK YOU Contacts Dan Bart dbarttiaonlineorg +17039077703 ANSI HSSP Matt Deane mdeaneansiorg
Page 22: State and Local Emergency Needs: Standards, Training, Exercises, Strategic Planning, and New Infrastructure Requirements STANDARDS Dan Bart, TIA Co-Chair.

22

TIA HS Standards Project 25 and MESA

ndash Mobility for Emergency and Safety Applications

ndash Narrowband wideband and broadband

cdma2000reg standards for IMT-2000

Wireless Priority Service (WPS)

Lawfully Authorized Electronic Surveillance (LAES)ndash Lead SDO supporting

CALEA

E-911 and Location-based standards

Terrestrial Mobile Multimedia Multicast (TM3)

NSTAC NGN for NSEP IPoS VoIP xxoIP Support for Gig-E

Networks

23

WWWTIAONLINEORGCIP

THANK YOU

Contacts Dan Bartdbarttiaonlineorg+17039077703

ANSI HSSP Matt Deanemdeaneansiorg

  • State and Local Emergency Needs Standards Training Exercises Strategic Planning and New Infrastructure Requirements STANDARDS Dan Bart TIA Co-Chair ANSI HSSP December 13 2005
  • Slide 7
  • Update on Activities of the ANSI Homeland Security Standards Panel
  • THANK YOU Contacts Dan Bart dbarttiaonlineorg +17039077703 ANSI HSSP Matt Deane mdeaneansiorg
Page 23: State and Local Emergency Needs: Standards, Training, Exercises, Strategic Planning, and New Infrastructure Requirements STANDARDS Dan Bart, TIA Co-Chair.

23

WWWTIAONLINEORGCIP

THANK YOU

Contacts Dan Bartdbarttiaonlineorg+17039077703

ANSI HSSP Matt Deanemdeaneansiorg

  • State and Local Emergency Needs Standards Training Exercises Strategic Planning and New Infrastructure Requirements STANDARDS Dan Bart TIA Co-Chair ANSI HSSP December 13 2005
  • Slide 7
  • Update on Activities of the ANSI Homeland Security Standards Panel
  • THANK YOU Contacts Dan Bart dbarttiaonlineorg +17039077703 ANSI HSSP Matt Deane mdeaneansiorg
Page 24: State and Local Emergency Needs: Standards, Training, Exercises, Strategic Planning, and New Infrastructure Requirements STANDARDS Dan Bart, TIA Co-Chair.

THANK YOU

Contacts Dan Bartdbarttiaonlineorg+17039077703

ANSI HSSP Matt Deanemdeaneansiorg

  • State and Local Emergency Needs Standards Training Exercises Strategic Planning and New Infrastructure Requirements STANDARDS Dan Bart TIA Co-Chair ANSI HSSP December 13 2005
  • Slide 7
  • Update on Activities of the ANSI Homeland Security Standards Panel
  • THANK YOU Contacts Dan Bart dbarttiaonlineorg +17039077703 ANSI HSSP Matt Deane mdeaneansiorg