Posts Tagged Lake County Emergency Telephone System Board

Fire Service News – Lake County Regional Operations and Communications Facility

Excerpts from the Chicagotribune.com:

#chicagoareafire.com; #LakeCounty911Center;

Rendering of the Lake County Regional Operations and Communications Facility. Lake County/HANDOUT

The construction site for the Regional Operations and Communications Facility (ROC) of Lake County is behind several county buildings in Libertyville . Work started in April.

Officials responsible for the creation of the ROC officially broke ground for the $53.8 million facility on Friday. It will consolidate emergency services serving more than 600,000 residents, making them more efficient .

When complete in the summer of 2025, the 37,426-square-foot building will handle the 911 emergency calls for the Lake County Sheriff’s Office as well as any other governmental entity which wants to join.

The project was 10 years in the making, starting when the Lake County Emergency Telephone System Board and other governmental entities looked at 911 consolidation in the county. 

Commonwealth Edison will be able to use the facility during power outages to more quickly restore service, and the building will be strong enough to keep functioning through natural disasters. It will be large enough for the emergency tele-communicators to work efficiently.

Along with $1 million from the federal government through an appropriation obtained with help from U.S. Rep. Brad Schneider, additional money came from funds the county received from the American Rescue Plan.

The county also sold $30 million in bonds to help finance the project, along with receiving a $2 million grant from the Illinois Clean Energy Communities Foundation and $5 million from the Emergency Telephone System Board.

thanks Rob

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9-1-1 Dispatch consolidation in Lake County

Excerpts from the ChicagoTribune.com:

Since 2013, Lake County, through the Lake County Emergency Telephone System Board, has studied whether consolidating more than a dozen independent primary and secondary Public Safety Answering Point (PSAP) or dispatch centers in Lake County could enhance 911 service.

New legislation in 2015 forced consolidation of smaller systems, and at the time, a study by the task force found that there were 19 dispatch centers employing 280 full-time equivalent positions at a cost of $33 million per year. Equipment maintenance costs about $17 million annually. If all systems were consolidated into one, the estimated savings at the time was between $2.3 million and $10.4 million per year, according to the 2015 study.

In the spring of 2018, 21 Lake County public safety entities agreed through an intergovernmental agreement to participate in a 911 Consolidation Implementation Planning Project. This fall, project members agreed to three tiers for further consideration and planning. The first would involve focusing on technology, where a member would agree to use standardized technology while maintaining independence. The second would add standardized policies and procedures formalized in intergovernmental agreements. The third would include a full consolidation that would combine all dispatch centers under a single entity or agency formed through intergovernmental agreement.

Eventually, the county plans to sell the property where its main dispatch center is in Libertyville that a was built in 1948, along with the old Winchester House property along Milwaukee Avenue. The county could build a replacement or combine with other entities to cover a wider area and save on efficiencies like administrative costs. There are nine different systems used in the 14 centers that serve Lake County.

One of the entities, the FoxComm E911 Communication Center, just purchased brand new equipment. They handle police and fire calls for Fox Lake, Grayslake, and Lake Villa, plus police calls for Park City. Like the county, Park City dispatches police and routes fire calls to the appropriate agency.

Cook, Lake, and DuPage counties, along with Will County to an extent, are the only counties in Illinois without a single 911 center.

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