The City of Norman, Oklahoma is home to the 22,000 students of the University of Oklahoma and another 104,000 permanent residents and growing. In order to provide for the public safety and welfare of Oklahoma’s third largest city, the 700 city employees - including police, fire, EMS, public works and administration - need a reliable communications system. Lance Terry, Norman’s emergency communications manager, became alarmed when employees began reporting that the 2-way radio systems were not working properly. “We knew we had a problem when we were getting complaints 3 to 5 times a week that our system was going down. Little did we know that we were losing all our LEC T1 connections every single day between 3:00 and 5:00 PM our prime drive time!” Investigating the problem was very difficult because the system, over time, had grown extremely complex incorporating many vendors, making trouble shooting difficult.
Lance turned to the city’s radio technician, Robert Stolz. Robert’s first objective was to find a back-up to support the failing system. His investigations brought him to Betts Telecom, a RAD Value Added Reseller in Oklahoma City. Betts was experienced dealing with state and local government and understood the issues immediately. Scott Walsh, Betts' Customer Engineer, met with Lance and Robert and quickly recommended that the City look at ways to consolidate all the various communications services into a multiservice platform that would also provide a central point for troubleshooting.