Tech company wins emergency services contract

Hull-based control room technology firm APD Communications has won a Home Office contract to pioneer the transition to a new communications network for UK emergency services.

APD has been hired to develop critical software to enable blue light organisations and other public services to integrate with the next generation Emergency Services Network (ESN).

It means APD will play a crucial part in revolutionising how the UK’s emergency services and other public agencies communicate, allowing them to use best-in-class commercial networks to keep people safe and secure.

The Home Office is leading a cross-government programme to deliver ESN, which will be an essential part of the UK’s critical national infrastructure. ESN will provide police, fire and rescue and ambulance services as well as other public safety organisations with secure and resilient voice communication and data services.

It will replace the ageing Airwave system and enable frontline and control room personnel to communicate over a 4G mobile network.

APD is the first supplier to be contracted to work with the Home Office to deliver integration to the ESN network.

The contract is to create an integration solution to connect emergency services to ESN, with the old and new systems working in tandem. It will pave the way to individual services and agencies undergoing a managed migration to the new advanced communications network.

APD managing director, Mike Isherwood, said: “We are delighted the Home Office has placed this significant contract with us, which reaffirms our position as the control room market leader and as a global control room leader in LTE solutions.

“It’s a significant badge of honour and will allow us to ensure all our customers are at the forefront of technology and operational efficiency, enabling them employ the most modern methods for interacting with, serving and protecting the public.

“The Home Office has placed its trust in us, on behalf of all the organisations it represents, to produce the control room technology required to connect with ESN. Subsequently it will be down to each individual service to make the transition, supported by our software solution.”

The Home Office contract runs to January 2021 and requires APD to produce control room technology, which will be trialled by lead force Thames Valley Police. A subsequent nationwide rollout is expected to take place in 2021 and 2022.

Isherwood added: “This is an absolutely critical step towards an exciting future. The primary objective is to continue to protect the public during this migration, ensuring a business as usual transition.

“After successful migration, the focus will shift to improving and enhancing services to the public through the use of this next generation technology to deploy a new wave of applications, such as enhanced location services and live video steaming, that will help public services to be more efficient, more effective and share information more easily.”

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