The UK government may have wasted more than £300m on the Airwave digital radio system, according to the Public Accounts Committee.
The Committee's report described the £1.5bn national network as "more sophisticated and expensive" than necessary.
Public Accounts Committee issues damning report
vnunet.com, 28 Nov 2002
The UK government may have wasted more than £300m on the Airwave digital radio system, according to the Public Accounts Committee.
The Committee's report described the £1.5bn national network as "more sophisticated and expensive" than necessary.
While the new Terrestrial Trunked Radio-based system will allow different police forces to communicate with each other, they cannot use it to communicate with local fire services.
The report claimed that Airwave will cost £300m more than a series of localised digital systems wanted by Police Authorities.
Despite police preferences, the government has insisted on the adoption of Airwave at a cost of £1.5bn over 19 years.
It is now a decade ago that a Home Office review recommended that police and fire services adopt compatible radio systems.
But the Committee warned that the day when emergency services within a particular area could communicate easily with each other during major incidents is "still a long way off".
There are also questions over the effectiveness and safety of the handsets. Scientists have pointed out that the devices pulse at 17.6MHz, which they believe is too close to the 16MHz at which brain signals operate.
In April, the National Audit Office labelled Airwave a risky project, while 30 police officers claimed that the handsets triggered illnesses following pilot schemes in Lancashire and North Yorkshire.
Airwave has since been adopted by seven police authorities, but ambulance and fire services are thought to favour rival Tetrapol technology.
Viper system rounds up the usual suspects in a fraction of the time
Opposition to mobile masts thwarts Tetra-based digital radio system
Becomes seventh UK police force to use Tetra-based network
Digital radio network battle rages on

Intel explains how its Xeon processors can handle data-intensive apps

More thoughts on how servers can help manage overload

Remote access - Three steps to getting connected
3.4 million UK professionals now work from home – is your company equipped?

Cost benefits of a global collaboration network
This white paper is a must read for organisations looking for evidence of the bottom-line benefits of high-definition video and voice communications
Keep up to date with the latest products, services and technologies from the world's leading IT companies; IThound.com brings you over 6,000 white papers, case studies and analyst reports.

We chat to Mike Maddison, UK head of Security, Privacy...

Update designed to give mobile users a richer, more personalised...

More thoughts on how servers can help manage overload
Do you agree?
Have your say on this article