Police upgrade software
Lolita Harper
After using the same computer system for 24 years, the Costa Mesa
Police Department is implementing the first phase of a technology
overhaul this week that comes complete with added benefits and minor
hiccups.
Computer experts have been milling around the department for days,
installing and putting into service the first phase of a new system
designed to upgrade the mobile terminals in patrol cars and 911
dispatching, Costa Mesa Police Lt. John FitzPatrick said. The new
system combines the Computer Aided Dispatch program -- largely known
as CAD -- with the Records Management System, allowing for better
access and organization for the entire department.
“The big factor in all this is that our old computer system didn’t
keep up with the industry, so now we are playing technical catch-up,”
FitzPatrick said.
While the hardware has not changed, police will now utilize a
Windows-based program from their terminals, he said. The mixing of
the old with the new, of high-powered software and old computers, has
caused some inevitable glitches and frustrations, he said.
Technical difficulties that affect the public are limited to
communication, as daily police files and arrest logs have not been
regularly available in the past week, but department officials are
confident the bugs will be worked out.
“Our old system was 24 years old, so obviously we are going
through some growing pains, coupled with the learning curve,”
FitzPatrick said.
Costa Mesa Police Lt. Karl Schuler has been with the department 28
years, before they even had computers, but said he hasn’t had any
trouble with the new system thus far. Schuler has attended classes on
the new computer system, and said applying those basic concepts is a
learning process. Schuler, who has lived through many changes as the
department, said he is taking it “day by day.”
“I was here when they had printers in the car and they would print
us the information we needed,” Schuler said. “Then those went away
and we didn’t have computers for awhile, until 24 years ago, when
they were the latest thing. Now we’ve got the new system, so we’re
rolling with it.”
When all three phases are complete, the goal is to move to a
paperless system and have everything streamlined, with integrated
mapping, a better crime analysis database and increased
communication, FitzPatrick said. The second phase includes work on
the mobile computer units in each patrol car and the third phase
would allow officers to file reports directly from their dashboard
terminals, he said. Reports are handwritten at the department.
“We are hoping for a system where our officers can type their
report in his car, send it to the watch commander for approval and
then to records management, which keeps the officers in the field,”
he said.
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