Katrina Exposes
Wireless Communication
Failure
If you
lived through Hurricane like I did in Gulfport, Mississippi
You can
appreciate the Federal Comunications Commission expressing the
urgency that most cell-transmitter sites in the U.S.
have at least eight hours of backup power when the main power
fails.
Actually
the regulators say in the event power fails, but it is not a matter
of if but when. On the morning of Katrina, in was able to
periodically reach neighbors who had left the area to communicate
what was happening in our neighborhood and the progress of the storm
since I had no outside communication.
Emergency crews fared no better than the victims and for many
hours people were left without any ability to communicate
Thee
argument of the industry is that backup power won’t help if the
towers are destroyed by wind or fire. Katrina certainly took down a
lot of cell towers but the lost of power in a hurricane occurs long
before any destruction of towers and in many cases the towers
survived but they were useless without power.
Eight
hours of backup is a minimum when destruction like Katrina hits. I
have been in hurricanes much less damaging than Katrina and the
power always goes out for several hours if not days. The backup
would allow the Utility companies like Mississippi Power and Coast
Electric sufficient time to get emergency crews to repair those
lines first and keep first responders and residents connected with
each other. Lives will depend on that backup and no cost is too
much. In the same paper, I read the IRS is spending $42 million
dollars to send 130 million households in the U.S a letter telling
us we could qualify to receive a $600 rebate. I think most people in
the U.S are aware of this fact and maybe theirs can lend some of
that money to the FCC to help get this program going.