AT&T disputes Verizon's FirstNet interconnection claims
Connecting state and local government leaders
Although Verizon said it is working on an interconnection with the nationwide public safety network, AT&T said those claims are not true.
As services for the national public safety wireless broadband network start be deployed, FirstNet contractor AT&T and others are pushing back against claims about alternative services offered by Verizon.
AT&T rival Verizon said it is working on an interconnection with the nationwide network that FirstNet awarded AT&T to build last spring. Verizon's claims are not true, according to AT&T.
"An interconnection agreement between FirstNet, AT&T and Verizon is currently not underway," an AT&T spokesman said in an email. "FirstNet is the country's only communications platform designed for all of public safety. And, while others may try to replicate what FirstNet will offer, FirstNet is the only network with spectrum dedicated in times of emergency and prepared to deliver on Congress's vision for public safety."
Since the summer, competition between FirstNet and Verizon's network plans has been heating up.
This past August, Verizon vowed to create a "core network" pulled from its national commercial 4G LTE network for first responders to use. The firm said its network covers 2.4 million square miles of the U.S. It chose not bid on the FirstNet contract because it said it didn't need the 20MHz of band 14 spectrum that came with it.
After FirstNet announced in recent weeks that all 50 states and five U.S. territories have opted into the program, Verizon reminded the states that just because they opted in didn't mean they had to commit to the plan.
Michael Maiorana, senior vice president for public sector at Verizon Enterprise Solutions, said public safety users didn't have to migrate to AT&T's network and urged them to explore all options.
Verizon's approach has rankled AT&T and a few others.
In a Jan. 9 meeting of the National Public Safety Telecommunications Counsel teleconference, Kevin McGinnis, a representative of National Association of State Emergency Medical Services Officials said Verizon's claims it has a unique public/private partnership with FirstNet and the ability to provide oversight were "unfounded."
McGinnis also questioned Verizon's efforts to build a network comparable to FirstNet.
"Verizon has said it could build a separate core for public safety, suggesting that it could work with the [FirstNet] core. Verizon promised priority and preemption, but it did not avail itself of the opportunity to participate in the bidding … from the beginning," McGinnis said.
"The consensus of [FirstNet's Public Safety Advisory Committee] was that these claims are not provable. Public safety needs to hold these companies accountable for their claims," FirstNet's Tom Sorley, who chairs the PSAC, said during the Jan. 9 teleconference. "We need to make sure we're holding folks accountable for what they say."
"We haven't had any recent meetings regarding interoperability with AT&T," Verizon spokesman John O'Malley said in a Jan. 23 email, "but we're certainly open to discussions that would lead to the best possible nationwide network for first responders -- that should be everyone's shared goal."
This article was first posted to FCW, a sibling site to GCN.