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JAM | Feb 22, 2024

Gov’t allocates $1.3 billion to continue Jamaica Emergency Communication System

Vanassa McKenzie

Vanassa McKenzie / Our Today

Reading Time: 2 minutes
Minister of Finance and the Public Service, Dr. Nigel Clarke, tables the 2024/25 Estimates of Expenditure in the House of Representatives on Thursday (February 15). At left is Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of National Security, Dr. Horace Chang. (Photo: JIS)


The Government has budgeted some $1.3 billion to continue initiatives under the ‘ Improvement of Emergency Communication System in Jamaica’ Project.

This aims to develop a national emergency communication system to coordinate incident response among key government agencies and volunteers.

This was revealed by Finance Minister Dr Nigel Clarke in the 2024/25 Estimates of Expenditure,
tabled in the House of Representatives.

For the upcoming fiscal year, the earmarked provision will be used to complete the installation of the remaining 97 base station radios and 222 mobile radios in emergency vehicles islandwide.

The allocation will also fund a system acceptance test and end-user training for ministries, departments and agencies in the use and maintenance of allocated radios.

It will also finance the handover or commissioning of the Disaster Emergency Communication (DECOM) infrastructure and the activation of its operation and sustainability plan.

Some of the achievements up to December 2023 include the completion of the National Works Agency’s backbone design for disaster emergency communication and a re-survey of 30 repeater and siren sites, conducted to determine the structural integrity of the towers.

Additionally, the Office of Disaster Preparedness and Emergency Management’s (ODPEM) Network Operation Centre has been retrofitted, while 12 repeater sites were rehabilitated.

ODPEM

Two maintenance centres were also constructed and two workshops were undertaken for the installation of mobile radios for public emergency vehicles in Kingston and St. James.

Construction work also commenced at 12 of 15 siren towers in St. Mary and St. Catherine.

Following several extensions, the initiative, which commenced in October 2016, is slated to end in March 2026.

The project’s implementation is being spearheaded by ODPEM, and co-financed by the Government of Jamaica (GOJ) and Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA).

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