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09/18/2002 Agreement Clerk oIlIIe Circul coun Danny L. Kolhage Clerk ofthe Circuit Court Phone: (305) 292-3550 FAX: (305) 295-3663 e-mail: phancock@monroe-clerk.com Menwranilum TO: Reggie Paros, Director Public Safety Division ATTN: Stacy DeVane Executive Assistant FROM: Pamela G. Han~ Deputy Clerk U DATE: October 7, 2002 At the September 18, 2002, Board of County Commissioner's meeting the the Board granted approval and authorized execution of a Contract between Monroe County and Positron Public Safety Systems Corporation for the relocation, reconfiguration and/or addition of 9-1-1 equipment for the City of Key West Police Department 911 Center. Enclosed is a duplicate original of the above mentioned for your handling. Should you have any questions please do not hesitate to contact this office. Cc: County Administrator w/o documents County Attorney Finance File.! KEY WEST POLICE DEPARTMENT 911 CENTER AGREEMENT THIS AGREEMENT is entered into this 18th day of September, 2002, by and between Monroe County, a political subdivision of the State of Florida, whose address is Gato Building, 1100 Simonton Street, Key West, FL 33040 (County), and Positron Public Safety Systems Inc. (CONTRACTOR), a Canadian corporation whose address is 5101 Buchan Street, Montreal, Quebec H4P 2R9. WHEREAS, County obtained equipment and provided for installation and service thereof for the City of Key West 911 Emergency Communications Center; and WHEREAS, the Key West Police Department 911 Center is being relocated from 525 Angela Street to 1600 North Roosevelt Blvd., Key West, Florida; and WHEREAS, it is necessary to obtain additional equipment, provide relocation of existing equipment and modify and reconfigure the Key West 911 Center; now, therefore IN CONSIDERATION of the following mutual covenants and promises contained herein, the parties agree as follows: 1. TERM. This agreement shall commence the 18th day of September, 2002 and continued through the 15th day of November, 2003, unless earlier terminated or extended in compliance with other provisions below. 2. SCOPE OF SERVICES. Contractor shall provide for equipment, relocation, addition, modification and reconfiguration of the City of Key West 911 Center as more particularly described in Exhibit A (Exhibit A is the bid specification for the Key West 911 relocation provided by Monroe County Emergency Communications Department), attached hereto and incorporated herein. 3. COMPENSATION. Contractor shall be paid a maximum of $ 112,688.94 (One hundred twelve thousand six hundred eighty eight Dollars and ninety four cents) in accordance with the pricing provisions of Exhibit B (Exhibit B is the bid proposal submitted to Monroe County by Positron Public Safety Systems), attached hereto and incorporated herein, unless the parties mutually agree to any additions in writing. Payment shall be made after submission to County of documentation which substantiates the completion of the services and provision of equipment as described in Exhibit A. The County's performance and obligation to pay under this agreement is contingent upon an annual appropriation, on September 18, 2002, for fiscal year ending September 30, 2003, by the Monroe County Board of County Commissioners. In the event that the funding is not approved by the Monroe County Board of County Commissioners on September 18th, 2002, this contract shall be deemed null and void. 4. INDEMNIFY AND HOLD HARMLESS. The Contractor covenants and agrees to indemnify and hold harmless Monroe County Board of County Commissioners and the City of Key West from any and all claims for bodily injury (including death), personal injury, and property damage (including property owned by Monroe County and/or Key West) and any other losses, damages, and expenses (including attorney's fees) which arise out of, in- connection with, or by reason of services provided by the Contractor or any of its subcontractor(s) occasioned by the negligence, errors, or other wrongful act or omission of the Contractor or its sub Contractor(s), their employees, or agents. In the event the completion of the project (to include the work of others) is delayed or suspended as a result of the Contractor's failure to purchase or maintain the required insurance, the Contractor shall indemnify the County from any and all increased expenses resulting from such delay. The first $10.00 of remuneration paid to the Contractor is for the indemnification provided for above. The extent of liability is in no way limited to, reduced, or lessened by the insurance requirements contained elsewhere within this agreement. 5. INSURANCE REQUIREMENTS. Insurance reql,lirements shall include Workers Compensation, General Liability Insurance in the amount of $100,000 per person, $500,000 per occurrence, $500,000 combined single limit, Motor Vehicle Liability Insurance with a combined single limit of $300,000.00 and Motor Vehicle Cargo Insurance. 6. INDEPENDENT CONTRACTOR. In carrying out the Work the Contractor is an independent contractor and in no way may be considered or deemed an employee or officer of the County. 7. WARRANlY. Contractor shall warrant that all equipment provided under this Agreement conforms to the equipment specifications of the Request for Bid dated May 24, 2002. The warranty shall remain valid for 12 months from the date of equipment installation and shall cover fully workmanship, materials and labor on repairs. Contractor is required under this warranty to remedy any such defect at its own expense and shall guarantee the availability of service assistance, repairs, and spare parts for a minimum of seven years after equipment delivery . 8. NON DISCRIMINATION. The Contractor agrees that it will not unlawfully discriminate against any of its employees or applicants for employment because of their race, color, religion, sex, national origin or disability. The Contractor must insert a provision similar to this paragraph in any subcontracts awarded under this contract except those for the purchase of commercial supplies and raw materials. 9. ETHICS CLAUSE. The Provider warrants that he/it has not employed, retained or otherwise had act on hiS/its behalf any former County officer or employee subject to the prohibition of Section 2 of Ordinance No. 010-1990 or any County officer or employee in violation of Se,ction 3 of Ordinance No. 010-1990. For breach or violation of this provision the County may, in its discretion, terminate this contract without liability and may also, in its discretion, deduct from the contract or purchase price, or otherwise recover, the full amount of any fee, commission, percentage, gift, or consideration paid to the former County officer or employee. 10. INTERPRETATION. Any discrepancies in the interpretation of this contract shall be resolved by reference to the Request for Bids dated May 24, 2002. 11. CONSENT TO JURISDICTION. This contract is governed by the laws of the State of Florida. - Venue for any litigation arising under this contract must be in a court of competent jurisdiction in Monroe County, Florida. 12. RECORDS. The Contractor shall keep such records as are necessary to document the performance of the agreement, and give access to these records at the request of the County or authorized agents or representatives of County. It is the responsibility of Contractor to maintain appropriate records to insure a proper accounting of all funds and expenditures. The Contractor understands that it shall be responsible for repayment of any and all audit exceptions which are identified by the Auditor General for the State of Florida, the Clerk of Court for Monroe County, the Board of County Commissioners of Monroe County, or their agents and representatives. In the event of an audit exception, the current fiscal year contract award or subsequent contract awards will be offset by the amount of the audit exception. In the event the contract is noLrenewed_ or supplemented in future years. The Contractor _will be billed by the County for the amount of the audit exception a shall promptly repay any audit exception. 13. COMPLIANCE WITH LAW. In carrying out its obligations under this Agreement, the Contractor shall abide by all statutes, ordinances, rules and regulations pertaining to or regulating the provisions of this Agreement, including those now in effect and hereafter adopted. Any violation of said statutes, ordinances, rules or regulations shall constitute a material breach of this Agreement and shall entitle the County to terminate this Agreement immediately upon delivery of written notice of termination to the Contractor. . . 2 14. NOTICE. Any written notice to be given to either party under this Agreement or related hereto shall be addressed and delivered as follows: FOR COUNTY Norm Leggett County Attorney 10600 Aviation Blvd. PO Box 1026 Marathon, FL 33040 Key West, FL 33041 FOR CONTRACTOR Sidney Bouzaglo VP, Products and Services 5101 Buchan Street Montreal, Quebec H4P 2R9 Dimitra Diplarakos Corporate Legal Counsel Fax: 514-345-2227 15. ANTI-KICKBACK. The Contractor warrants that no person has been employed or retained to solicit or secure this Agreement upon an agreement or understanding for a commiSSion, percentage, brokerage or contingent gee, and that no employee or officer of the County has any interest, financially or otherwise, in the said funded project, except for general membership. For breach or violation of this warranty, the County shall have the right to annul this Agreement without liability or, in its discretion, to deduct from the Agreement price or consideration, the full amount of such commission, percentage, brokerage or contingent fee. 16. TERMINATION. This Agreement shall terminate on November 15, 2003. Termination prior thereto shall occur whenever funds cannot be obtained or cannot be continued at a level sufficient to allow for the continuation of this Agreement pursuant to the terms herein. In the event that funds cannot be continued at a level sufficient to allow the continuation of this Agreement pursuant to the terms specified herein, th~ Agreement may then be terminated immediately by written notice of termination delivered in person or by mail to Contractor. The County may terminate this Agreement without cause upon giving 7 days written notice of termination to Contractor. The County shall not be obligated to pay for any services or goods provided by Contractor after Contractor has received written notice of termination. 17. TERMINATION FOR BREACH. The County may immediately terminate this Agreement for any breach of the terms contained herein. Such termination shall take place immediately upon receipt of written notice of said termination. Any waiver of any breach of covenants herein contained to be kept and performed by Contractor shall not be deemed or considered as a continuing waiver and shall not operate to bar or prevent the Contractor from declaring a forfeiture for any succeeding breach eit~r of the same conditions or of any other conditions. 18. PUBLIC ENTITY CRIME STATEMENT. A person or affiliate who has been placed on the convicted vendor list following a conviction for public entity crime may not submit a bid on a contract to provide any goods or services to a public entity, may not submit a bid on a contract with a public entity for the construction or repair of a public building or public work, may not submit bids n leases of real property to publiC entity, may not be awarded or perform work as a contractor, supplier, subcontractor, or Contractor under a contract with any public entity, and may not transact business with any public entity in excess of the threshold amount provided in Sec. 287.017, for Category Two for a period of 36 months from the date of being placed on the convicted vendor list. If the Contractor is on the convicted vendor list, then this Contract is void ab initio with the County under no obligation to pay the ContFactor any- compensation or damages under any legal theory whatsoever. 19. AUTHORITY. Contractor warrants that is authorized by law to engage in the performance of the activities encompassed by the project herein described. Each of the signatories for the Contractor below certifies and warrants that the Contractor's name in this Agreement is the full name as designated in its corporate charter (if a corporation); they are empowered to act and contract for the Contractor, and this Agreement has been approved by the Board of Directors of Contractor or other appropriate authority. 20.' LICENSING AND PERMITS. Contractor warrants that it shall have, prior to .. commencement of work under this Agreement and at all times during said work, all required licenses and permits whether federal, state, County or City. 3 21. ENTIRE AGREEMENT. The parties agree that this written contract represents their final mutual understanding and replaces any prior communications or representations between the parties, whether written or oral. This contract may only be modified in a writing agreed to, and executed by, both parties. ho.@i <;O,!.~",WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties hereto have set their hands and seals the day and year first above /~ fb '" /$;, ,- .b\ l: ".;\ k. \\ "'1", ':;. .~\ , ;-\ "~'" .. (re'li." .. . , , \,;:)Cf'\ "'L- .. ~'~""";';;'l ~": fr: DANNY L. KOLHAGE, CLERK .....~.~......~ .\'........".~......;..;.;;......G:;...;.;.... . ~r~. ~-:-~~:~: ',. By: Deputy Clerk JdconKW911 .'11.:1 'AINOO:1 30HNm,j 18 'HI:) .~T) 3~VH1O'c\1 }. ';1"10 00 :~ Wd L - 1JO ZOUl OHO::l3H HO.:l 0311.:l 4 BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS OF MONROE COU FLORIDA By hairperson { ~~J BY DATE U ~/~~~ EXHIBIT" A" REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL SEALED BID BY MONROE COUNTY~ FL. For the City of Kev W est~ FL. PSAP Bv the Emere:encv Communications Department Of Monroe Countv~ FL. ~ TABLE OF CONTENTS Section 1. General Requirements 1. Introduction 2. General Information 3. Insurance 3.1 Workers Compensation 3.2 Liability Insurance 4. Proposal Contents 5. Cost Proposal 6. Proposal Opening 7. Vendor Selection 8. Delivery and Installation 9. Warranty 10. Service Life ll. Equipment of Current Production 12. Indemnify and Hold Harmless 13. Non Discrimination 14. Documentation 15. Training 16. Maintenance Agreement 16.1 Maintenance Program 16.2 Support Access 16.3 Critical Maintenance 16.4 Normal Maintenance 16.5 Warranty, Spare Parts 17. Service 17.1 Service Facility 17.2 Service Report 18. Evaluation Criteria 18.1 General 18.2 Initial Review 18.3 Final Review Section II. Overview/Profile 2.0 Overview / Profile 2.1 Project Summary 2.2 New Facility 2.3 Existing Facility 2.4 Transition Section III. Technical Specifications 3.0 Technical Equipment Specifications 3.1 General Equipment Specifications 3.2 Performance 3.3 Reliability 3.4 Expansion 3.5 Specific E911 Controller Features 3.5a Voice Transfers 3.5b Incoming Trunks 3.5c Logging Recorder Interfaces 3.5d Relay Contacts 3.5e Alarms 3.6 Maintenance Terminal 3.7 Maintenance Printer 3.8 Statistical Reports 3.8a Automation Call Detail Record Printer 3.9 ALl Database Section IV. Telephonv Features 4.0 Telephony Equipment Features 4.1 General Requirements 4.2 Distributed Architecture 4.3 Modularity / Flexibility Section V. Intelli2ent Workstations 5.0 Intelligent Workstations 5.1 General Requirements 5.2 Telephony Functions 5.2a ALl / ANI Identification 5.2b Caller ID on Administrative Lines 5.2c Call Transfer Functions 5.2d Data Transfer Functions 5.3 Integrated TDD 5.4 Digitized Voice / Integrated Voice Recording 5.5 Call Lists 5.6 Message Board 5.7 System Toolbar 5.8 Incident Management Attachments: Furniture Layout floor-plan Furniture Design and measurements Equipment Room, Tentative Layout SECTION I GENERAL REQUIREMENTS 1. INTRODUCTION The work and equipment specified in this document is intended for use in the City of Key West, Florida, Monroe County E9-1-1 Emergency Communications Center. This Emergency Communications Center is located at 1600 North Roosevelt Boulevard, Key West, Florida. This is a Primary Public Safety Answering Point. The equipment installed, configured and supplied must be compatible with Monroe County's current 911 equipment and protocol. The primary purpose of the equipment at the Key West Public Safety Answering Point is to provide the Automatic Number Identification (ANI) and the Automatic Location Identification (ALl) of parties calling 9-1-1. The equipment supplied and configured should be capable of Phase 1 Wireless (ANI) and Phase II Wireless (ALI). The equipment should also be capable of transferring emergency calls to other agencies and be equipped with a Management Information System (MIS). Monroe County will accept sealed bids addressed to: Monroe County Purchasing Department Room 213 1100 Simonton Street Key West, FL. 33040 Two signed original bids and one copy are required. The outside of the sealed envelope should state: Sealed Bid for Key West 911 PSAP. Sealed Bids must be received by July 23rd, 2002, no later than 11 :00 am. All equipment must be installed, configured and operational at the Key West Public Safety Answering location (1600 North Roosevelt Boulevard, Key West, Florida) by November 15t\ 2002. Prices quoted in bids should represent fully installed and tested equipment, including labor and materials for wiring from the Telephone Company provider demarcation point to the E9-1-1 equipment room and to the call-taker workstations. All technical questions should be addressed to: Monroe County Emergency Communications Department ATT: Gerald N. Leggett Senior Director, E9-1-1 Co-ordinator I 0600 Aviation Boulevard Marathon, FL. 33050 On site inspections will be at the bidder's discretion. All site visit requests will be coordinated by the E9-1-1 Project Manager listed above. Submission of a proposal shall be conclusive evidence that the bidder has investigated and is satisfied as to the conditions to be encountered in performing the work. Any additional materials or labor that the bidder deems necessary to insure a satisfactory installation for the purpose intended shall be noted in the Proposal and the cost included in the bid quotation. 2. General Information The installation and criteria presented in this proposal should not be deemed specific and it is the responsibility of the bidder to verify the completeness of the materials and the suitability of the equipment to meet the intended purpose. The system should provide reliable, high quality telephone service with modem features for the Public Safety Answering Point personnel. In certain cases in this proposal, specifications and/or brand names of certain manufacturers may be quoted. This is not to be construed as limiting the competition, as proposals are invited by manufacturers and distributors of other equipment which equals or exceeds the performance of the specified item, will be given full consideration. Exceptions to any part of the requirements stated in this proposal must be clearly identified as exceptions. Alternatives should be stated at that point in the response. Monroe County is not liable for any costs incurred with replying to this Request for Proposal. 3. Insurance 3.1 Workers Compensation The Bidder, performing as an independent contractor thereunder, shall be fully responsible for providing Worker's Compensation or other applicable insurance coverage for itself and it's employees and the City of Key West and Monroe County shall have no responsibility or liability for such coverage. 3.2 General Liability Insurance The successful Bidder must provide Monroe County, Risk Management Department, a certification by an Insurance Carrier, showing the Bidder to have in effect during the term of any contract a General Liability Insurance Policy, in the amount of $100,000.00/$500,000.00/$100,000.00 which shall be the primary coverage for all Bidder's activities under contract and all equipment, software and systems including training of any type which are part of this bid. Bidder must provide certification of insurance compliance within 15 calendar days after notification of award. Certification must include the following: a. Name and Address of Insurance Company b. Policy Number c. Liability coverage in the amount specified. d. Contain the bidding document title from which award is made. 4. Proposal Contents The Bidder shall submit (3) three proposals of response to this Request for Proposal. Two (2) originals signed, and one photocopy. The proposal may be rejected if the responses to the requested specifications are incomplete or if the proposed system deviates from the specifications. All portions of the RFP contain numbered or letter sections. All portions of this RFP must be responded to in sequence and referenced to the specific section number or letter. A list of five (5) current installation of the proposed type of equipment, installed by the bidder, shall be submitted, giving the agency name, city and state. The name and telephone number of a knowledgeable contact person employed by those agencies shall be supplied for purpose of reference. A complete list of all equipment, hardware and software proposed or utilized for this proposal shall specify manufacturer, model, revision and part number (serial numbers where applicable). All additional equipment and comp,ment parts proposed for this project shall be new and meet minimum requirements stated herein, and be in operable condition. Equipment currently owned by Monroe County shall be tested and utilized to the fullest extent to reduce the overall project cost and minimize the amount of new equipment purchases. 5. Cost Proposal The proposal submitted should specify a fixed cash purchase price for additional equipment required and specified. Awarded Bidder and Monroe County will mutually agree upon a payment schedule. Proposal must show as separate items the cost of: 1. Proposed new Equipment and cost. 2. Monroe County equipment utilized and associated cost. 3. Installation 4. Training 5. Project Management 6. All other costs incidental to the successful installation of the specified system. Any additional costs not stated in the proposal shall not be incurred by the City of Key West, FL. or Monroe County, unless specifically agreed to in writing by Monroe County. 6. Proposal Opening Proposals received prior to July 23rd, 2002, 11 :OOam, will be kept secure and unopened. The Purchasing Department, whose duty it is to open proposals shall determine when the specified opening time has arrived. No proposal received after the above-specified deadline will be considered and will be returned to the bidder unopened. Proposals may be withdrawn or resubmitted at any time up to the deadline for proposal closing. All proposal responses must be labeled: Sealed Bid for Key West 911 PSAP. Unless otherwise specified, all formal bids submitted shall be binding for ninety (90) calendar days following the bid date. No responsibility will be attached to the City of Key West or Monroe County for unintentional premature opening of a proposal not properly addressed and identified. No bidder may withdraw a proposal within 90 days after the actual date of the opening. All requests to withdraw a proposal prior to this must be made in writing. 7. Vendor Selection Proposals will be evaluated by Monroe County for conformance to the specification requirements. Preference will be given to those Bidder's providing demonstrated capability and experience in the design and implementation of similar systems. Proposals will be evaluated by an evaluation committee. Finalist may be invited to an interview. Selection of the successful vendor will be followed by contract negotiations. The evaluation committee's final recommendations will be based upon an analysis of the offering, not just lowest price indicated. The terms and conditions for contract award imposed herein shall govern in all cases and conflicting terms or conditions submitted by the bidder may constitute sufficient grounds for rejection of the bid. The Bidder understands that the contract award can only be granted by the Monroe County Board of County Commissioners. 8. Delivery and Installation The new equipment purchased by Monroe County hereunder, shall be delivered to 1600 North Roosevelt Boulevard, Key West, FL. and installed by the Bidder without additional cost or expense to the City of Key West, FL. or Monroe County, FL. and at the convenience and direction of Monroe County. Monroe County previously purchased equipment which will be utilized within the new PSAP, this equipment will be made available to the successful Bidder for implementation within the new system. Monroe County shall not be deemed to have accepted any component or piece of equipment until such time as said equipment has been installed and operating in accordance with the manufacturer's specifications. The telephone system and the installation thereof shall be accomplished with the minimum of interruption to the normal business operation or the 911 service. All work shall comply with the applicable national, state and local codes and regulations. The Bidder shall keep fully informed of all Federal and State laws; all regulations pertaining to the Occupational and Safety Hazards Act (OSHA); all local laws, ordinances and regulations; and all orders and decrees of bodies and tribunals having any jurisdiction or authority, which in any manner affect the conduct of work. The Bidder at all times shall observe and comply with all applicable laws, ordinances, regulations, orders and decrees. Upon discovering any provisions in the contract that are contrary to or inconsistent with any law, ordinance, regulation, order or decree, the Bidder shall immediately report it to Monroe County, FL. in writing. 9. Warranty Bidder shall warrant that all newly purchased equipment performs in accordance with equipment specifications. The warranty shall remain valid for twelve (12) months from the date of equipment installation. The warranty shall fully cover workmanship, materials and labor on repairs. Under this warranty, the Bidder shall remedy at his own expense any such defect. Bidder shall guarantee the availability of service assistance, repairs, and spare parts for a minimum of seven (7) years after equipment delivery. 10. Service Life Telephony hardware shall be designed for a minimum of ten (10) years total service life from date of equipment installation. Computer hardware shall consist of high-quality off-the shelf IBM-PC compatible workstations from reputable manufacturers. 11. Equipment of Current Production Only new equipment of the latest design in current production will be considered and purchased, Monroe County existing state of the art equipment shall be re- utilized and tested to assure latest hardware and software revisions. Monroe County will in no case accept used, reconditioned or obsolete equipment as additional equipment from the successful bidder. Only equipment that meets current industry standards will be considered. 12. Indemnify and Hold Harmless Bidder shall indemnify and hold harmless the City of Key West, FL. and Monroe County, FL., its agents, servants and employees against all claims, demands and judgments made or recovered against them for damages to real or tangible personal property or for bodily injury or death to any person or any claim arising out of, or in connection with this Request For Proposal, where such damage, injury, death or claim was caused by the negligence of Bidder, or subcontractor of Bidder or their employees, servants or agents. Monroe County, FL. agrees to notify Bidder promptly of any claim or demand, and to cooperate with Bidder in a reasonable way to facilitate the settlement or defense of such claim or demand. 13. Non Discrimination All Bidders agree that during the life of the contract, the Bidder will not discriminate against any employee or applicant for employment because of race, color, creed, national origin or ancestry and will intend a similar provision in all subcontracts entered into for the performance thereof. 14. Documentation The proposed system shall include complete printed and bound system manuals and user documentation delivered to Monroe County. In addition, all documentation shall also be provided in electronic format (Adobe Acrobat PDF) on CD. 15. Training Bidders shall include with their proposal course outlines for both Call-taker and System Administrator Training. 16. Maintenance Agreement 16.1 Maintenance Program Maintenance of all new equipment installed as a result of this RFP shall have a one (I) year warranty maintenance program starting upon final acceptance of the entire system. Monroe County's previously purchased equipment is currently under a long term maintenance agreement. 16.2 Support Access Both warranty and contract maintenance shall be provided on a seven days a week, twenty-four (24) hours a day basis, to include weekends and holidays. In addition, the Bidder shall provide a 1-800- number phone access to Bidder's own technical support twenty-four (24)-hours a day basis, to include weekends and holidays. 16.3 Critical Maintenance Critical Maintenance Requirement is defined as any problem that jeopardizes or degrades the overall performance of the system. The Bidder shall provide in their technical proposal their response times to the PSAP in any Critical Maintenance Requirement. The areas covered under Critical are: Networking, ANI and ALl Controllers, Electronic Sets, Displays, Telephone Controller Equipment, Continuous Printer(s) and Display Terminal(s). Bidders must define their maximum response time parameters. 16.4 Normal Maintenance Normal Maintenance Requirements is defined as those problems that do not affect the overall performance of the system, but still require attention. The Bidder shall provide in their technical proposal their response times to the PSAP under Normal Maintenance Requirement. Bidders must define their maximum response time in parameters. 16.5 Warranty, Spare Parts During the First Year New System Warranty Period following the date of final acceptance, the Bidder shall, upon notification by the PSAP Agency of any malfunction, make the necessary repairs, including labor and materials, at the Bidder's expense, for all new equipment purchased. Replacement and spare parts will be available for at least seven (7) years after final acceptance of the system. Should the manufacturer discontinue this product or cease to do business, the Bidder agrees to stock an adequate supply of components. 17 Service 17.1 Service Facility The Bidder shall identify the location of, or establish by the date of equipment delivery, a factory-trained and certified service facility equipped with the instrumentation necessary to provide service on the proposed system. 17.2 Service Report The Bidder shall furnish a service report to Monroe County, FL., E911 Co- ordinator upon completion of each maintenance call and maintain a service record for each piece of equipment serviced. A copy of this record shall be kept at the PSAP. The report at a minimum shall include the following: A. Date and time notified (verified and initialed by PSAP Supervisor on Duty). B. Date and time of arrival (verified and initialed by PSAP Supervisor on duty.). C. Type and model number( s) of equipment serviced. D. Time spent for repair. E. Time the repair was completed. F. Service that was completed. G. Description of the malfunction. H. List of parts replaced. I. Action taken to prevent reoccurrence. 18. Evaluation Criteria 18.1 General The Evaluation of all responses received will consist of any initial and final (detailed) reviewls follows: 18.2 Initial Review The initial review will evaluate all submissions for conformance to stated guidelines, to eliminate all responses which would deviate substantially from the basic intent of the request. 18.3 Final Review The final review will consist of the following: . Evaluate the technical content of the offering to determine which total configuration will best satisfy successful development and implementation of an Enhanced 9-1-1 Emergency Communications System. The Bidder may be requested to give an oral presentation of their submission at their expense. . The Bidder's level of experience and financial stability in telecommunications. . Prices quoted for the system. . The Bidder's performance and service record with similar projects. SECTION II OVERVIEW / PROFILE OF RFP 2.0 Overview / Profile 2.1 Project Summary The City of Key West, Florida is building a new police administration building at 1600 North Roosevelt Boulevard, Key West, Florida. The E9-l-l PSAP will be relocated to this new facility. Currently the City of Key West PSAP is located at 525 Angela Street in the City of Key West and will be moving to the new location. Construction plans at this time indicate a E9-l-1 move date of November 15th, 2002. Bidders should take into consideration that this date is preliminary and construction changes could vary the actual move date. Currently the City of Key West E9-1-1 center consist of three (3) Positron lAP answering positions, supported by a Positron Life Line system. While this system is a fully enhanced 911 system, it also has an independent ALII ANI back up data base on site. BellSouth is the E9-1-1 service provider and has a long term maintenance agreement for the on site equipment. 2.2 New Facility The new E9-1-1 facility located at 1600 North Roosevelt Boulevard, Key West, Florida will consist of four (4) call taker positions. These positions will inclurle lAP panel mount units, backroom equipment and a stand-alone database. This new facility will be upgraded to include four (4) Positron Power work-stations or equivalent to be compatible with Monroe County existing equipment. 2.3 Existing Equipment Monroe County, Florida is the owner of a large amount of recently purchased Positron 911 equipment. This equipment will be available to the successful bidder to utilize while constructing the new E9-1-1 center in the City of Key West, Florida. This should substantially reduce the cost of construction and facilitate this project. Bidders should request a inventory of this equipment to simplify the RFP process and minimize the new equipment purchases. 2.4 Transition Both Monroe County and the City of Key West desire a turnkey transition for this project. To prevent any interruption in 911 service the new facility should be constructed, tested and functional prior to the actual cut-over date, while maintaining the existing facility in an operational mode at the old location. In this manner cut-over can be achieved by simply having the 911 service provider re- direct the 911 calls to new trunks installed at the new facility. SECTION III TECHNICAL SPECIFICATIONS 3.0 TECHNICAL / EQUIPMENT SPECIFICATIONS 3.1 General Equipment Specifications The intent of these specifications is to provide a complete and satisfactory operating Enhanced 9-1-1 Emergency Communications System, with ANI and All for Key West, Monroe County, Florida Public Safety Answering Point (PSAP). All equipment and installation material required to fulfill the above shall be furnished and installed whether or not specifically enumerated herein. The installation will be handled as "turnkey project," including delivery, installation and satisfactory check out of all equipment. Installation of all equipment and wiring will be the total responsibility of the Bidder. The Bidder will have total responsibility for system compatibility and successful performance. The only work not included in the installation project would be work involving building construction (e.g., moving or adding any necessary doors, walls, etc.). 3.2 Performance A distributed processor architecture shall be used so as to meet the performance demanded by an E9-1-1 environment. Every module shall function independently of the others. There should be no situation in which a processing bottleneck could occur. Each call processing module shall be equipped with a dedicated MF receiver to avoid delays in decoding ANI. (Systems which force incoming calls to wait for an available MF receiver before presenting the call will be given secondary consideration. ) Communication with the All database shall be full duplex. All requests shall be made immediately after ANI has been decoded. (Systems which wait for the call taker to go off-hook before sending requests for All will be given secondary consideration). 3.3 Reliability No single point of failure will render the system non-functional. Processing power shall be distributed among the E9-1-1 controller modules. There will be no central controlling module. and all modules shall function independently of each other. Each line interface / call processing module will serve one trunk, one call taker, and one transfer position. The state of a line interface/call processing module shall have no effect on the performance of another. This is necessary in order to prevent heavy trunk traffic, false trunk seizures, line failures, or defective line interface/call processing cards from affecting service to trunks handled by other line interface/call processing cards on the E9-1-1 controller. Hardware redundancy and autornatic switchover shall be provided on the various modules where appropriate. Modules that provide communication to external devices such as All databases and all other system administrative ports shall be configured with redundancy. One module shall operate in an active mode and the other in standby mode. The standby module shall become functional automatically if the first one fails. Modules that provide communication to ANI! ALl display shall be configured with redundancy. One module shall operate in an active mode and the other in standby mode. The standby module shall become functional automatically if the first one fails. If the module provides communication to more than one display, independent ports and links shall be provided to each display. A failure of one port or link shall not cause a complete module failure. Each display shall operate independently of another. All power supplies shall be redundant and distributed. A power related fault on a E9-1-1 controller module shall not affect the power supplied to other modules. It shall not be necessary to power down the E9-1-1 controller in order to replace modules. In addition, it shall be possible to remove redundant modules that are in standby mode from the E9-1-1 controller without any interruption in service. All redundant modules shall be accessible directly from the front of the controller without the need of removing cables from the rear of the controller or module. DC power battery backup for the E9-1-1 controller shall be provided as an option. 3.4 Expansion The E9-1-1 controller shall be modular, supporting from one (1) to over (100) E9- 1-1 Trunks in increments of One (1) Trunk with appropriate additional equipment. Each controller shelf shall accommodate up to Eight (8) E9-1-1 Trunks. It shall be possible to populate any empty Trunk card slot simply by adding a Trunk Interface Card, without requiring software or hardware upgrades (other than the additional Trunk Interface cards). Answering Position handling shall be modular as well, with the ability to scale from 1 to over 100 answering positions with appropriate additional equipment. 3.5 Specific E911 Controller System Features All features described in this section relate to North American Standards for E9-1- 1 systems in both trunking and central office features. 3.5a V oice Transfers The E9-1-1 controller shall be equipped to perform tandem voice transfers. Voice transfers may be either speed or manually dialed. Once a transfer connection is established, the equipment will allow a three-party voice conference. 3.5b Incoming Trunks The E9-1-1 controller shall be equipped for {Number of trunks} E9-1-1 Trunks, with each trunk card individually configurable to either standard CAMA with MF signaling, or to Enhanced MF for 10/20 digit handling. 3.5c Logging Recorder Interfaces The proposed system shall provide start signals for logging recorders and call check conversation recorders. The start signal should be activated when the call taker goes off hook, and deactivated when the call is released. 3.Sd Buzzer/Relay Contacts Four independent solid state relay contacts shall be available for switching of AC or DC powered devices. Two of the contacts shall be controlled by the call processing modules and will allow selective ringing depending on which trunk is originating the call. The two remaining relay contacts shall respond to open or close commands entered as DTMF tones dialed from call taker telephone set keypads (for remote control of doors, air conditioners,...) 3.Se Alarms Three alarm levels will be generated in response to abnormal occurrences requiring the attention of maintenance or supervising personnel: . Minor. . Major. . Critical. Four solid state relay contacts shall be provided, three of which correspond to an alarm level. 3.6 Maintenance Terminal A maintenance terminal interface shall provide the following interaction with the E9-1-1 controller: Diagnostic mode To display all event, diagnostic and error messages as they occur. Maintenance mode To program and configure the E9-1-1 controller (program interface parameters, assign telephone numbers, reset alarms, generate reports, select options). The programming and configuration procedure shall make use of a hierarchical menu structure. Once the desired sub-menu is reached, most entries shall be made by selecting a number from a list. Maintenance mode shall be password protected to ensure system security. 3.7 Maintenance Printer A maintenance printer interface shall drive a printer to provide hard copy of system error messages. 3.8 Statistical Reports The E9-1-1 controller system shall maintain statistics on: · Database communications. · Trunk traffic. · Chronological history of alarm and error messages. 3.8a Automation Call Detail Record Printer An ACDR printer interface shall be provided. An automatic call detail record (ACDR) shall be printed by the system every time a call is released. The information contained in each ACDR includes: · The caller's ANI and ALL · Position of agent that answered the call. · Transferred destination. · Date, times of the various connect and disconnect events, and other particulars relating to a call. · A time and date stamp is automatically printed every hour. · Incoming trunk Identification 3.9 ALl Database The E9-1-1 controller shall support dedicated redundant data links to the Telco ALl database and the redundant stand-alone on site database. A request to the database shall be made as soon as caller ANI is received. The E9-1-1 controller shall compare the telephone number returned with the ALl to the original ANI sent by the CO, ensuring that caller ALl is matched with ANI. If the received ALl is unclear or incomplete, a call taker must be able to command the system to repeat the request to the database. The stand-alone database shall be updated upon installation and will be an automatic transfer function upon loss of enhanced telco provided enhanced 911 trunks. SECTION IV TELEPHONY FEATURES 4.0 Telephony Equipment Features 4.1 General Requirements The proposed system shall be capable of operating in a mixed environment whereby: · Some answering positions are equipped with a desktop or panel-mounted phone set under control of an Intelligent Workstation (IWS) computer, and · Other positions are equipped with a "virtual" phone set located within the IWS workstation computer which controls it (i.e. there is no external phone set at the position). Regardless of which approach is used at a given posItIOn, the Intelligent Workstation computer shall have control of telephony functions (specifically, when a separate phone set is used, the call-taker can perform ALL telephone functions via the Intelligent Workstation using the external set only as a backup or alternate ). The required number of IWS positions equipped with external phone sets is 4. The required number of IWS positions equipped with "virtual" phone sets is O. 4.2 Distributed Architecture Each module shall operate under control of its own microprocessor. There shall be no single point of failure affecting more than one line or one console. 4.3 Modularity / Flexibility The design shall be modular to allow for future expanSIOn beyond present requirements. SECTION V INTELLIGENT WORKSTATIONS 5.0 Intelligent Workstations 5.1 General Requirements Four (4) PC-based Intelligent Workstations are required. These must be fully 32-bit applications running under the fully 32-bit Windows NT environment. Windows 9x and/or 16-bit code are not considered stable enough and will therefore not be considered. A true Microsoft SQL database shall provide data storage for both configuration and operational data. This is meant to ensure the use of an enterpflSe-class database engine that is robust and widely supported. Office application-class database engines (such as Paradox, FoxPro, Access, etc.) are not considered robust enough for an emergency-response environment and therefore do not meet this criteria. Workstations and servers shall be manufactured by Compaq, and equipped with at a minimum PII-450 MHz Intel Processors, 128M RAM and a 17-inch flat screen monitor. 5.2 Telephony Functions The Intelligent Workstation shall provide full Computer-Telephony Integration, allowing call-takers to have on-screen access to all telephone features. This should include call queues, up to five (5) in total, that can be configured with different line types and characteristics. The queues shall ensure that any calls in a particular Queue are handled in a first-come, first-serve basis. The call queue indicators should show the following types of information: · Number of calls in queue · The time oldest call has been in queue · The trunk number or line number of the incoming call · Line status, i.e., ringing, off-hook The Intelligent Workstation must have the ability to show all trunks and lines associated with each individual queue. This should be a secondary window, through which lines and trunks are accessible, regardless of their status in any Queue. All standard telephone functions must be available through the Intelligent Workstation. These shall include the following as a minimum: . Hold. . Dial. . Re-dial. . Release. . Cancel. . Transfer / conference. . Speed Dial. S.2a ALl/ANI Identification Automatic ANI! ALl information access is an essential requirement of any 9-1-1 system, computer based or otherwise. An Intelligent Workstation should be able to offer a great deal of flexibility handling this data. For example, while the incoming ANI and ALl information resides permanently in the database the information should be presented to the call-taker in a data entry mode. This allows the call-takers to modify the information without affecting the original ANI! ALl data. ANI! ALl data shall be shared with all other positions. Manual requests of ALl shall be available for a call-taker-entered ANI. There shall be a means of disabling Manual database requests if required by law. In addition, ALl Before Answer shall be provided, whereby ALl is displayed for all E9-1-1 calls ringing in at the PSAP. S.2b Caller ID on Administrative Lines The Caller ID of calls received over administrative lines shall be displayed on- screen. The proposed system must be equipped to handle Caller ID for 25 Administrative Lines. S.2c Call Transfer Functions The Intelligent Workstation shall be configurable to perform transfers using the following (mutually exclusive) methods: . Transfer destination determined by programming in the CO. In other words, the pre-determined tandem transfer code for (as an example) "Fire" is sent to the CO, which then routes the call to the appropriate Fire Department. From the call-taker's perspective, he or she simply presses the "Fire" transfer button, and the call is transferred to the appropriate agency. . Transfer destination determined by the Intelligent Workstation. In other words, the Intelligent Workstation dynamically sets the "recommended" transfer destination based on the ESN in the ALl data, as dials the appropriate number via the tandem transfer mechanism. From the call-taker's perspective, he or she simply presses the "Fire" button, and the call is transferred to the appropriate agency. The label on the "Fire" transfer button will change to reflect the particular agency selected by the system (i.e. "Fire - [Agency Name ]"). Whichever method is configured, the call-taker shall be able to override the default destination by selecting an alternate from a list of destinations. Any given transfer destination button shall be programmable with one or more numbers used to reach the corresponding agency. It shall be possible to define the time of day for which each of the numbers is valid. The time spans that different numbers are valid can overlap, therefore if a number is busy, the Intelligent Workstation shall automatically cycle through the other currently valid numbers as the transfer button is pressed. 5.2d Data Transfer Function The system shall have the ability to transfer ALl Data to multiple destinations via a single key-press (On-Screen "Send" button and/or keyboard activation). The basic requirement is for ALl transfer to remote serial printer via dial-up connection. Propose as an OPTION an enhanced data transfer capability whereby ALl, and other data gathered by the call-taker can be transferred via dial-up connection to remote Fax machines. 5.3 Integrated TDD The Intelligent Workstation shall provide integrated on-screen TDD for all lines. The device should handle both Baudot and ASCn protocols. The system shall allow the call-taker to communicate freely by using the keyboard and/or selection of pre-programmed messages. The system shall buffer the keystrokes that a calltaker types in the TDD module. This will give the calltaker the option to: . Send the entire message only once the entire sentence is typed, OR . Send each keystroke as it is typed. This will be used in situations where a TDD caller tends to start responding to a message before it is completed, sometimes before understanding the true nature of the message. It shall be possible to switch between buffered and non-buffered mode on the fly. Each answering posloon shall be equipped with its own TDD processing hardware. Systems which employ a central piece of equipment for TDD processing will not be considered due to single point of failure considerations. 5.4 Digitized Voice / Integrated Voice Recording In addition to standard contacts for external call recorders, the Intelligent Workstation shall have a built-in and integrated call recorder as per the following definitions: Built-in - The call recording functionality shall be accessible on-screen via the Intelligent Workstation's GUI (Graphical User Interface). Integrated - Individual recordings shall be accessible via their associated on- screen call records. In other words, the relationship between a given call event, the ALl and associated audio recording is clearly displayed. Audio Recordings shall be stored in W A V format, and purged after a configurable delay in order to conserve hard drive space. It shall be possible to save (and un- save) individual call recordings to prevent purging of the file. In addition, the system should have the ability to record personalized greeting announcements, i.e., "9-1-1 What is your emergency?" 5.5 Call Lists The Intelligent Workstation shall provide an on-screen view of PSAP-wide call activity, providing call status (RINGING, TALK, HOLD, etc...) as well as associated ALl (even before-answer for call still ringing into the PSAP). Multiple lists will be provided, showing different groupings of call events, for example "All Active Calls", "All Abandoned Calls", "All Previous Calls from this ANI", "All Calls previously handled by this Calltaker", etc... It shall be possible to barge into an active call by selecting it from the Active Calls list. It shall also be possible to re-dial an abandoned call or other previous calls by selecting from the appropriate Call List. A Query feature shall allow call records to be filtered and searched on the fly. When used in conjunction with the OPTIONAL Incident Management feature, Incident-related listed shall also be provided. 5.6 Message Board The Intelligent Workstation shall provide an on-screen message board which is always on-line. This shall allow the broadcast of a textual message to each call- taker or a select group of call-takers in the PSAP without interrupting the call- taker activity. The system shall also allow the recipient call-takers to acknowledge that a message was read. This feature shall be unobtrusive in that it shall never cover up another feature of the workstation and shall always be available. Pre-programmed messages shall be available for commonly used messages (such as "Weather warning in effect - Heavy Rain") and keyboard entry for one-of-a- kind messages. 5.7 System Toolbar The Intelligent Workstation shall provide the ability to program buttons to allow for "point & click" access to frequently used features and commands such as, print on demand, fast coding of incident (if Incident Manager OPTION is implemented) and third-party application launch. 5.8 Incident Management As part of an Incident Management OPTION, the Intelligent Workstation shall allow the call-taker to select a designated incident type, such as fire, auto accident, B & E, after the initial response from the caller. The system shall present the call-taker key questions relative to the emergency at hand. Priority questions should be highlighted to prompt the call-taker to get the most important information first. The information should be automatically stored in the system's database and be available to all other call-takers. The incident types should be configurable by the PSAP. The system should also be programmable to recommend primary transfer destination based on the type of incident. The call-taker should also have the ability to send different types of information, such as ANV ALl, additional location data, or even a script of the incident's questions and answers to remote printers or faxes via the Enhanced Data transfer OPTION. Enhancement of TDD functionality: When the Incident Management OPTION is used, the list of pre-programmed TOO messages shall be automatically supplemented with additional pre-programmed messages that pertain to the selected incident type. For example, if the call-taker selects "domestic Fire" as an incident type, the pre-programmed TOO messages will then also include "Is anyone still in the building? GA". Multiple-Language Support: The Intelligent Workstation shall allow the call- taker the ability to change the language of the questions presented to them in the Incident Detailing section of the screen. This shall affect both the questions shown here and the pre-programmed TOO messages associated with each question. Premise Information Database: The Intelligent Workstation shall support a local database that provides the call-taker with immediate access to stored information about a specific location. This information could include building access, hazard warnings, hazardous material information, structural plans, evacuation instructions, site photos. The system should not force a call-taker to read through extensive information in order to find the required information, it should automatically search for existing information based on the ANI of the call, and indicate to the call-taker that there is data available for review. Premise Data will be entered by the PSAP. Standard Operating Procedures Database: The Intelligent Workstation shall provide the software tools to allow for the creation and viewing of an SOP (Standard Operating Procedures) database. This will assure procedures are applied in a uniform and consistent manner, in addition to providing training functionality. Based on the type of incident entered, the system shall prompt the call-taker that procedures exist. In addition procedures shall be displayed in hypertext format, allowing call-takers to move quickly through the information to access key procedures quickly. SOP data will be entered by the PSAP. The system shall also allow the importing of third party SOP's, such as APeO's. EXHIBIT "B" Positron Public Safety Systems (Q61021 - Direct -Monroe County - City of Key West FL) Configuration Parameters Lltp Line 1IJ1) ANI All ConTrollel Number of E9-1-1 Trunks ANI/All System Software Remote Diagnostics Demand All Print Battery Backup 4 Included Included Provided Via Power 911 Included An-.,wprtnCj PCJSltlOfh Power 911 Workstations Number of Power 911 Intelligent Worllstations Number of Buttons per Position lAP Plus Telephones with EL DIs1*Y Concentrator Daisy Chain Kit Number of lAP Plus Panel mount SeIs Number of Buttons per Position Number of Line Appearances per Position 4 1,280 on-screen. 1 1 30 30 hilS Power MIS Included System Equipment Redundant ute Une 100 ANVAU Controller Components - Configured for 4 Trunks lAP Plus Backroom Equipment lAP Plus Telephones - 1 Desktop Position Power 911 Software - 4 Positions Power 911 Hardware - 4 Positions Power MIS Hardware and Softw_ Peripherals & Accessories InstJlllation and Project Coordinalion Training Software Evergreen( Releases of I*st software revisions. Annual recurring) $ 3,271.50 $ 254.93 $ 2,733.87 $ 36,151.89 $ 19,018.00 $ 7.708.75 $ 7.300.00 $ 21,000.00 $ 7.250.00 $ 8.000.00 E llllr'"k' . - t.1 S 11268894 Notes: (1) Our syUom conftguratlon is bMed on the att.I:Md ..... list that _ provided to __by Norm Leggett on July 11th. 2002. " then are lIflY inllCcurllCl.. In this doc_t, our configuration and pricing will be subject to change. (2) PMIIron is not reaponalble for the _ down of the old ayattIm. (3) PMIIron Is not responaIbIe for the IIIlWlng .........atIGn of any equipment or ~ not l'II8I1ufactunH1 by PoaIlnIn. (.&) Proper calIIlng conduits must exist for the IMIIIIation to proceed. (5) All network equipment requi.... Is to be ~ and ......Ied by BellSouth, prior to iIIetIIIlatIGn lI8I'Vices by POIIitron. (I)" any equipment used from the Monroe Courdy..... Is found to not be lit the ................. .-.. ret_ ......, lIIonroe County will be ch8rged for the coat of the upgrede killn ....on. if any equipment Is found to be defIIc1Ive. lIIonroe county will be clwged for the coat of ntplIlra. (7) PMIIron is not responalble for providing any an _ rneintlInMIce .....Ices and our sole responalbllity to lIIonroe County ... be for lnatallatlon lI8I'Vices, repelr servic.. end -....... trelnlng. (I) IF lIIonroe County selects to meintain lhelr .... ayUom lhelr will be an annueIllIchnlail support fee charged by PoaIlnIn. CONFIDENTIAL July 19, 2002 Page 1 of 2 0f Positron Public Safety Systems (Q61021 . Direct -Monroe County - City of Key West FL) Page 2 of 2 Options Remote om Transfer Request Software Netdock Software CAD Interlace Software Power MAP Software Power MAP Hardware - Additional Monitors, RAM and Dua/llideo Cards Map Editing Soffware Integrated Call Recorder Incident Manager Ute Une 100 Technical Training Oass . 5 days On Site (full das up to 8 people) POWER 911 Installation and Configuration Training Oass - 5 days On Site (full class up to , people) AGent Toolkit Software $ 1,028.20 $ 868.50 $ n6.54 $ 15,100.00 $ 2,487.00 $ 4,275.00 $ 3,300.00 $ 3,600.00 $ 12,650.00 $ 12,650.00 $ 2,400.00 lenns PRICING All prices are in U.S. Funds. Taxes, if applicable. are extra. FOB Positron, Montreal. Shipping costs are prepaid and charged. PAYMENT Net 30 days. DELIVERY TBD. VALIDITY 90 days. Peripherals & Accessories. ASCII Terminal All Modem Laser Printer Network Cabling per position(Cat 5) 50 Pin Punch Blocks 25 Pair Am henol Cable 1 2 1 5 8 8 . Note: Any other required peripherals or acc8SSGries will be the responslbilly 01 Monroe County. Force Majeure Clause POSITRON will not be responsible or liable for any loss or damage occasioned by its inability to perform any of its obligations herein where such inability was caused by a force majeure, which shall include but is not limited to, fire, strike, tIood, explosions, civil or militaly authori1y, terrorist acts, insurrection or civil disorder, em bargoes, Government action, delay in or refusal of equipment by any third party, or other cause which is unavoidable or not in con1ro1 of POSITRON. LIMITATION OF LIABILITY CLAUSE POSITRON SHALL IN NO EVENT BE LIABLE TO KEY WEST FOR LOSS OF PROFITS, OR SPECIAL, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE. OR EXEMPLARY DAMAGES, INCLUDING COSTS OF LEGAl EXPENSES, IN CONNECTION WITH THIS AGREEMENT AND/OR THE PERFORMANCE HEREOF. POSITRON'S TOTAL LIABILITY TO KEY WEST FOR ANY CLAIM FOR DAMAGES SHALL BE LIMITED TO DIRECT DAMAGES. CONFIDENTIAL July 19, 2002 Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe County, FL Page 1 of 89 July 16, 2002 Positron Public Safety Systems Response To Request For Proposal Sealed Bid By Monroe County, FL For the City Of Key West, FL, PSAP By the Emergency Communications Department Of Monroe County, FL The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POS I T RON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe County, FL Page 2 of 89 July 16,2002 TABLE OF CONTENTS Section 1, General Requirements 1. Introduction 2. General Information 3. Insurance 3 .1 Workers Compensation 3.2 Liability Insurance 4. Proposal Contents 5. eost Proposal 6. Proposal Opening 7. Vendor Selection 8. Delivery and Installation 9. Warranty 10. Service Life 11. Equipment of Current Production 12. Indemnify and Hold Harmless 13. Non Discrimination 14. Documentation 15 . Training 16. Maintenance Agreement 16.1 Maintenance Prograrn 16.2 Support Access 16.3 eritical Maintenance 16.4 Normal Maintenance. 16.5 Warranty, Spare Parts 17. Service 17.1 Service Facility 17.2 Service Report 18. Evaluation Criteria 18.1 General 18.2 Initial Review 18.3 Final Review Section II, Overview/Profile 2.0 Overview / Profile 2.1 Project Summary 2.2 New Facility 2.3 Existing Facility 2.4 Transition The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POSITRON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written pennission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe County, FL Page 3 of 89 July 16, 2002 Section III, Technical Specifications 3.0 Technical Equipment Specifications 3.1 General Equiprnent Specifications 3.2 Performance 3.3 Reliability 3.4 Expansion 3.5 Specific E911 eontroller Features 3.5a Voice Transfers 3.5b Incoming Trunks 3.5c Logging Recorder Interfaces 3.5d Relay eontacts 3.5e Alarms 3.6 Maintenance Terminal 3.7 Maintenance Printer 3.8 Statistical Reports 3.8a Automation Call Detail Record Printer 3.9 ALl Database. Section IV, Telephony Features 4.0 Telephony Equipment Features 4.1 General Requirements 4.2 Distributed Architecture 4.3 Modularity I Flexibility Section V, Intelligent Workstations 5,0 Intelligent Workstations 5.1 General Requirements 5.2 Telephony Functions 5.2a ALl IANI Identification 5.2b Caller ill on Administrative Lines 5.2c Call Transfer Functions 5.2d Data Transfer Functions 5.3 Integrated TDD 5.4 Digitized Voice I Integrated Voice Recording 5.5 eall Lists 5.6 Message Board 5.7 System Toolbar 5.8 Incident Management The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POSITRON [t may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe County, FL Page 4 of 89 July 16, 2002 SECTION I GENERAL REQUIREMENTS. 1. INTRODUCTION The work and equiprnent specified in this document is intended for use in the City of Key West, Florida, Monroe eounty E9-1-1 Emergency Communications Center. This Ernergency Communications Center is located at 1600 North Roosevelt Boulevard, Key West, Florida. This is a Primary Public Safety Answering Point. The equipment installed, configured and supplied must be compatible with Monroe eounty's current 911 equipment and protocol. I Positron Response: Read & Understood The primary purpose of the equipment at the Key West Public Safety Answering Point is to provide the Automatic Number Identification (ANI) and the Autornatic Location Identification (ALl) of parties calling 9-1-1. The equipment supplied and configured should be capable of Phase 1 Wireless (ANI) and Phase II Wireless (ALl). The equipment should also be capable of transferring emergency calls to other agencies and be equipped with a Management Information System (MIS). Positron Response: Comply Positron is proposing Power MIS as part of this proposal. Monroe County will accept sealed bids addressed to: Monroe eounty Purchasing Department Room 213 1100 Simonton Street Key West, FL. 33040 I Positron Response: Read & Understood Two signed original bids and one copy are required. The outside of the sealed envelope should state: Sealed Bid for Key West 911 PSAP. Sealed Bids rnust be received by July 23rd, 2002, no later than 11 :00 am. All equipment must be installed, configured and operational at the Key West Public Safety Answering location (1600 North Roosevelt Boulevard, Key West, Florida) by November 15th, 2002. I Positron Response: Read & Understood The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POSITRON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe County, FL Page 5 of 89 July 16,2002 Prices quoted in bids should represent fully installed and tested equipment, including labor and materials for wiring frorn the Telephone eompany provider demarcation point to the E9-1-1 equipment room and to the call-taker workstations. All technical questions should be addressed to: Monroe eounty Emergency eommunications Department ATT: Gerald N. Leggett Senior Director, E9-1-1 eo-ordinator 1 0600 Aviation Boulevard Marathon, FL. 33050 I Positron Response: Read & Understood On site inspections will be at the bidder's discretion. All site visit requests will be coordinated by the E9-1-1 Project Manager listed above. Submission of a proposal shall be conclusive evidence that the bidder has investigated and is satisfied as to the conditions to be encountered in performing the work. Any additional materials or labor that the bidder deems necessary to insure a satisfactory installation for the purpose intended shall be noted in the Proposal and the cost included in the bid quotation. I Positron Response: Read & Understood 2. General Information The installation and criteria presented in this proposal should not be deemed specific and it is the responsibility of the bidder to verify the completeness of the materials and the suitability of the equipment to meet the intended purpose. I Positron Response: Read & Understood The system should provide reliable, high quality telephone service with modem features for the Public Safety Answering Point personnel. I Positron Response: Comply The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POSITRON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe eounty, FL Page 6 of 89 July 16,2002 In certain cases in this proposal, specifications and/or brand names of certain manufacturers may be quoted. This is not to be construed as limiting the competition, as proposals are invited by manufacturers and distributors of other equipment which equals or exceeds the performance of the specified item, will be given full consideration. I Positron Response: Read & Understood Exceptions to any part of the requirements stated in this proposal must be clearly identified as exceptions. Alternatives should be stated at that point in the response. Monroe County is not liable for any costs incurred with replying to this Request for Proposal. I Positron Response: Read & Understood 3. Insurance 3.1 Workers Compensation The Bidder, performing as an independent contractor thereunder, shall be fully responsible for providing Worker's Compensation or other applicable insurance coverage for itself and it's employees and the City of Key West and Monroe eounty shall have no responsibility or liability for such coverage. I Positron Response: Comply 3.2 General Liability Insurance The successful Bidder must provide Monroe County, Risk Management Department, a certification by an Insurance Carrier, showing the Bidder to have in effect during the term of any contract a General Liability Insurance Policy, in the amount of $ 100,000.00/$SOO,000.00/$100,000.00 which shall be the primary coverage for all Bidder's activities under contract and all equipment, software and systems including training of any type which are part of this bid.. Bidder must provide certification of insurance cornpliance within 15 calendar days after notification of award. Certification must include the following: a. Name and Address of Insurance Company b. Policy Number c. Liability coverage in the arnount specified. d. Contain the bidding document title from which award is made. I Positron Response: Comply The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron.and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POSITRON It may not be dIsclosed to thIrd parnes WIthout pnor wnlten pemusslOn from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Momoe eounty, FL Page 7 of 89 July 16, 2002 4. Proposal Contents The Bidder shall submit (3) three proposals of response to this Request for Proposal. Two (2) originals signed, and one photocopy. The proposal maybe rejected if the responses to the requested specifications are incornplete or ifthe proposed system deviates from the specifications. I Positron Response: Comply All portions of the RFP contain numbered or letter sections. All portions of this RFP must be responded to in sequence and referenced to the specific section nurnber or letter. I Positron Response: Comply A list of five (5) current installation of the proposed type of equipment, installed by the bidder, shall be submitted, giving the agency name, city and state. The name and telephone number of a knowledgeable contact person employed by those agencies shall be supplied for purpose of reference. Positron Response: Comply Power 911 IWS References The following references represent a cross-section of the various ways in which Power 911 IWS can be configured, i.e. integrated with lAP Plus Workstations, lAP/PC Cards, or Meridian ACD, as well as Central Office based. San Francisco FirelEMS 11 Positions, with lAP Plus, LLI00. Cutover Date: March 16, 1998. Capt. Sebastian Wong 2789 25th Street San Francisco, CA 94110 Tel.: (415) 206-7824 The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POSITRON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp, Monroe eounty, FL Page 8 of 89 July 16, 2002 San Diego Federal Fire 9 Positions, with lAP/PC Cards, LLI00 Cutover Date: Q4-1998 Mary Ball- Director of Telecommunications 4279 Pacific Highway, Building 28 San Diego, CA 92138-1226 Tel.: (619) 524-2517 San Ramon Valley Fire 4 Positions, with lAP/PC Cards, LLI00 Cutover Date: May 15, 1998. Chris Sutter 800 San Ramon Street Danville, CA 94526 Tel.: (510) 838-6606 Contra Costa Sheriff 12 Positions with lAP Plus, LLI00 Cutover Date: November 1, 1997. Gloria Sutter 40 Glacier Drive Martinez, CA 94553 Tel.: (510) 671-5902 Cook County Sheriff 15 Positions with lAP Plus, LLI00 On-screen access to LEADS database via SNA. Cutover Date: September, 1998 Cindy Brelle, Director 6511 W. Harrison Drive Chicago, IL 60016 Tel.: (847) 294-4742 Chardon Police Department 2 Positions with Dual Screen, and on-screen access (via terminal emulation) to both LEADS database and CMI CAD system. Cutover July 3,1997. Chief David Hyslop 111 Water Street Chardon, OH 44024 Tel.: (440) 286-6123 The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POS IT RON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe eounty, FL Page 9 of 89 July 16, 2002 Montreal 9-1-1 Center Central-Office based 11 Positions with Digital Centrex links to redundant DMS-100 switches, operated flawlessly throughout the week-long Ice Storm of Jan. 1998. Cutover Date: October 19,1997. Mr. Andre Audet Responsable des operations, Controle de la qualite Centre d'urgence 9-1-1, Communaute Urbaine de Montreal 2580, boul. Saint-Joseph Est Montreal (Quebec) H1Y 2A2 Tel.: (514) 280-2672 Canary Islands Two Systems, one on each island, each with: Meridian Option 61 with ACD, 33 Positions / 2 E1 Trunks. Cutover Date: May 31, 98 Mr. Jose Julian Isturitz / Director of Gestion Sanitaria de Canarias. Tel: +34-9-28-49-8600 - Fax: +34-9-28-22-06-96 Mr. Jose Damian Ferrer / Gestion Sanitaria de Canarias Tel: +34-928-296-600 - Fax:+34-928-264-106 A complete list of all equipment, hardware and software proposed or utilized for this proposal shall specify manufacturer, model, revision and part number (serial numbers where applicable). All additional equipment and component parts proposed for this project shall be new and meet minimum requirements stated herein, and be in operable condition. Equipment currently owned by Monroe County shall be tested and utilized to the fullest extent to reduce the overall project cost and minimize the arnount of new equipment purchases. Positron Response: Comply Please refer to the pricing section for details. The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POSITRON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe eounty, FL Page 100f89 July 16, 2002 5. Cost Proposal The proposal submitted should specify a fixed cash purchase price for additional equipment required and specified. Awarded Bidder and Monroe County will mutually agree upon a payment schedule. Proposal must show as separate items the cost of: 1. Proposed new Equipment and cost. 2. Monroe eounty equipment utilized and associated cost. 3. Installation 4. Training 5. Proj ect Management 6. All other costs incidental to the successful installation of the specified systern. I Positron Response: Comply Any additional costs not stated in the proposal shall not be incurred by the eity of Key West, FL. or Monroe eounty, unless specifically agreed to in writing by Monroe eounty. I Positron Response: Read & Understood 6.Proposal Opening Proposals received prior to July 23rd, 2002, 11 :OOam, will be kept secure and unopened. The Purchasing Department, whose duty it is to open proposals shall determine when the specified opening tirne has arrived. No proposal received after the above-specified deadline will be considered and will be returned to the bidder unopened. I Positron Response: Read & Understood Proposals rnay be withdrawn or resubmitted at any time up to the deadline for proposal closing. All proposal responses must be labeled: Sealed Bid for Key West 911 PSAP. I Positron Response: Read & Understood Unless otherwise specified, all formal bids submitted shall be binding for ninety (90) calendar days following the bid date. I Positron Response: Read & Understood The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POSITRON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe eounty, FL Page 11 of89 July 16,2002 No responsibility will be attached to the City of Key West or Monroe eounty for unintentional premature opening of a proposal not properly addressed and identified. No bidder may withdraw a proposal within 90 days after the actual date of the opening. All requests to withdraw a proposal prior to this must be made in writing. I Positron Response: Read & Understood 7. Vendor Selection Proposals will be evaluated by Monroe County for conformance to the specification requirements. Preference will be given to those Bidder's providing demonstrated capability and experience in the design and implementation of similar systems. Positron Response: Read & Understood Positron, founded in 1970, is a high technology company specializing in the design and manufacture of state-of-the-art public safety telecommunications equipment. With over 450 employees, Positron occupies a 180,000 sq. ft. facility, and has been manufacturing Enhanced 9-1-1 equipment since 1983. Today, Positron is the known leader in the E9-1-1 industry, having installed close to 3,000 systems across the United States, Canada and overseas. Many Bell Operating Companies, such as BellSouth, Pacific Bell, Qwest and Sprint have standardized on Positron E9-1-1 equipment to meet the needs of their customers. Positron is also the first E9-1-1 equipment manufacturer to provide turnkey countrywide solutions internationally, having successfully implemented 9-1-1 systems in Costa Rica, the Cayman Islands, and the Canary Islands. We have acquired extensive experience in implementing E9-1-1 turnkey solutions, both in association with Telcos as well as via direct Positron execution of all project elements, including Project Management, Installation, Training, and ongoing Maintenance. Proposals will be evaluated by an evaluation committee. Finalist may be invited to an interview. Selection of the successful vendor will be followed by contract negotiations. The evaluation committee's final recommendations will be based upon an analysis of the offering, not just lowest price indicated. I Positron Response: Read & Understood The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POSIT RON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe County, FL Page 12 of89 July 16, 2002 The terms and conditions for contract award imposed herein shall govern in all cases and conflicting terms or conditions submitted by the bidder may constitute sufficient grounds for rejection of the bid. The Bidder understands that the contract award can only be granted by the Monroe eounty Board of eounty eommissioners. I Positron Response: Read & Understood 8. Delivery and Installation The new equipment purchased by Monroe eounty hereunder, shall be delivered to 1600 North Roosevelt Boulevard, Key West, FL. and installed by the Bidder without additional cost or expense to the City of Key West, FL. or Monroe County, FL. and at the convenience and direction of Monroe eounty. Monroe County previously purchased equipment which will be utilized within the new PSAP, this equipment will be made available to the successful Bidder for implementation within the new system. Monroe County shall not be deemed to have accepted any component or piece of equipment until such time as said equipment has been installed and operating in accordance with the manufacturer's specifications. I Positron Response: Comply The telephone system and the installation thereof shall be accomplished with the minimum of interruption to the normal business operation or the 911 service. I Positron Response: Read & Understood All work shall comply with the applicable national, state and local codes and regulations. I Positron Response: Comply The Bidder shall keep fully informed of all Federal and State laws; all regulations pertaining to the Occupational and Safety Hazards Act (OSHA); all local laws, ordinances and regulations; and all orders and decrees of bodies and tribunals having any jurisdiction or authority, which in any manner affect the conduct of work. The Bidder at all times shall observe and comply with all applicable laws, ordinances, regulations, orders and decrees. I Positron Response: Read & Understood Upon discovering any provisions in the contract that are contrary to or inconsistent with any law, ordinance, regulation, order or decree, the Bidder shall immediately report it to Monroe eounty, FL. in writing. The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POSITRON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe County, FL Page 13 of89 July 16, 2002 I Positron Response: Read & Understood 9. Warranty Bidder shall warrant that all newly purchased equiprnent performs in accordance with equipment specifications. The warranty shall remain valid for twelve (12) months from the date of equipment installation. The warranty shall fully cover workmanship, materials and labor on repairs. Under this warranty, the Bidder shall remedy at his own expense any such defect. Bidder shall guarantee the availability of service assistance, repairs, and spare parts for a minimur.l of seven (7) years after equipment delivery. Positron Response: Comply Positron's standard warranty statement is as follows: For the term of the Warranty extending from the date of shipment, Positron warrants the equipment to be free from defects in material and workmanship, In the event that during the term of the warranty the product should prove to have material or workmanship defects, Positron will repair, or at its discretion, replace the defective equipment. No equipment of any kind may be returned without prior authorization and specific shipping instructions from Positron and Positron cannot accept any responsibility for material returned without such authorization. Positron's standard Warranty period for products covered by this agreement will be twelve (12) months from the date of installation or eighteen (18) months from shipping date. This warranty does not apply to defects or malfunctions caused by abuse, accident, modification, negligence, disaster such as fire, flood, wind, and lightning or any other damage not resulting from defects in material or workmanship or reasons beyond the control of Positron. This warranty is in lieu of and excludes all other warranties expressed or implied including but not limited to the implied warranty of merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose. There are no warranties which extend beyond this limited warranty and in no event shall Positron be liable for loss of anticipated profits, incidental or consequential damages, loss of time or other losses incurred in connection with the operation, possession or use of the equipment. The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POS I T RON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permIssion from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe eounty, FL Page 14 of89 July 16,2002 10. Service Life Telephony hardware shall be designed for a minimum often (10) years total service life from date of equipment installation. I Positron Response: Comply Computer hardware shall consist of high-quality off-the shelfIBM-Pe compatible workstations from reputable manufacturers. Positron Response: Comply Positron uses Compaq computer hardware which has been laboratory tested to meet the performance and reliability requirements of the Positron Power 911 platform. 11. Equipment of Current Production Only new equipment of the latest design in current production will be considered and purchased, Monroe County existing state of the art equipment shall be re-utilized and tested to assure latest hardware and software revisions. Monroe County will in no case accept used, reconditioned or obsolete equipment as additional equipment from the successful bidder. Only equipment that meets current industry standards will be considered. I Positron Response: Comply 12. Indemnify and Hold Harmless Bidder shall indemnify and hold harmless the City of Key West, FL. and Monroe County, FL., its agents, servants and employees against all claims, demands and judgments made or recovered against them for damages to real or tangible personal property or for bodily injury or death to any person or any claim arising out of, or in connection with this Request For Proposal, where such damage, injury, death or clairn was caused by the negligence of Bidder, or subcontractor of Bidder or their employees, servants or agents. Monroe County, FL. agrees to notify Bidder promptly of any claim or dernand, and to cooperate with Bidder in a reasonable way to facilitate the settlement or defense of such claim or demand. I Positron Response: Comply The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is otTered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II pos I T RON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe County, FL Page 15 of89 July 16, 2002 13. Non Discrimination All Bidders agree that during the life of the contract, the Bidder will not discriminate against any employee or applicant for employment because ofrace, color, creed, national origin or ancestry and will intend a similar provision in all subcontracts entered into for the performance thereof.. I Positron Response: Comply 14. Documentation The proposed system shall include complete printed and bound system manuals and user documentation delivered to Monroe eounty. In addition, all documentation shall also be provided in electronic format (Adobe Acrobat PDF) on CD. Positron Response: Comply Every Positron product is furnished with a complete set of system documents. Because products are structured within our MRP (Materials Requirement Planning) system to call up their particular documents, products are always shipped with appropriate documentation. System documents provide an overview of the product, followed by application, setup, configuration and usage descriptions. In addition, documents are designed for training courses given to serve a product. All documents are available in both paper-bound format and soft copy format (.pdf (Adobe Acrobat)) on CD-ROM. The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POSITRON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe County, FL Page 16 of89 July 16, 2002 15. Training Bidders shall include with their proposal course outlines for both Call-taker and System Administrator Training. I Positron Response: Comply Positron is proposing Call-Taker and Administer training. As an option, Positron is proposing the Lifeline 100 technical training class and the Power 911 Installation & Configuration class at the customer site. These courses are designed to provide on site technical support personnel with the necessary troubleshooting and problem resolution skills. As a result, Monroe County can become self proficient and be able to maintain their own system. Course outlines are described below. Call Taker Course By the end of this course, participants will know how to: . Answer a 911, emergency and administrative call, transfer a call to another agency or telephone number and identify I caller's location I . Create, dispatch and close an incident (If Applicable) . Manage calls . Recognize SOP and Premise information (If Applicable) . Broadcast messages . Update their personal speed dial phone book Benefits This course introduces the use of the Power911 call taking system and all the features required to perform the functions of Call Taker. As a hands-on course the learner will soon become confident with its use and Call Takers will fmd that they can immediately start using the Power911 system. Prerequisites Students must be accredited call-takers per the requirements of their place of employment. Who Should Attend This course is designed for Call Takers and PSAP administrators who will be using Power9ll to perform their jobs. Individuals taking this course must already have a good understanding of the 911 call taking functions. Duration of Course Four hours Course Content The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POSITRON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp, Monroe eounty, FL Page 17 of89 July 16,2002 ~ Introduction to Power9I1 . How Power911 works . The redundancy of the system . What the GUI modes are . Logging on to Power911 Using the Status Bar . Identify the parts of the status bar Using the Telephony Module . Answering a call . Identifying the ANI information . Releasing a call . Conferencing . Dialing out using hookswitch . Using Hold and Mute Using the Location Identification Module . Identifying the All information . Tagging erroneous All . Answering a TDD call Using the Incident Module . Creating an incident . Comparing Calling party information and Location information . Dispatching an incident . Closing an incident Using the Lists Module . Using available lists Transferring a call . Opening a Transfer panel . Using a transfer button to make a call Broadcasting a message . Opening the Broadcast panel . Using pre-defined statements . Choosing a message recipient . Answering a message Using Agent Tool Kit (If Applicable) . Entering a new contact . Adding the contact to a speed dial The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POSITRON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe County, FL Page 18 of89 July 16, 2002 Power 911 Administrator Course By the end of this course, participants will know how to: . Use the Administrative Tool is Windows NT . Change a Position on Site . Navigate the Configurator . Use Database Control Functions . Update the Position Data . Update and Add Agency Data . Modify and Add Incident Data . Modify Agent Data . Write SOP and Premise Information Files . Schedule and Produce Power MIS Reports Benefits As a core component of Power9ll, understanding how to modify data in the configurator is essential to the Administrators ability to maintain an up to date Power911 system. This course will teach the fundamentals for updating a configuration file when day to day changes are required. Who Should Attend This course is designed for PSAP Administrators. The prerequisites for this course are Power911 Call-Taker course #960800. Duration of Course Two days Course Content Using Windows NT Administrative Tools . Using the Event Viewer . Adding a new workstation . Adding and Changing NT Users . Using Task Manager Navigating the Configurator . Logging On to Configura tor . Using the File Menu Use database control functions . Expanding and Collapsing Data Views . Managing Table Content . Configuring Properties . Referencing and Linking Configuring Position Data . Introduction to Positions The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is olTered solely for the pU'l'ose of evaluation. II POSITRON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe County, FL Page 19 of89 July 16, 2002 . Adding Positions Configuring Agency Data . Introduction to Agency Data . Adding Agencies . Modifying and existing Agency telephone Configuring Incident Data · Introduction to Incident Data · Introduction to Incident Data · Establishing Incident Priorities · Providing Generic TDD Questions · Creating Incident Types . Modifying Incident Types Configuring Agent Data · Introduction to Agent Data . Modifying button layouts . Adding and deleting buttons . Adding and removing Agents Writing Standard Operating Procedures (SOP) and Premise Information . Introduction to SOPs and Premise Information files . Writing an SOP and Premise Information files · Modifying a pre-written file · Preparing the SOP and Premise Information for use in Power 911 Power · Preparing Power MIS reports for scheduled reporting . Preparing historical reports Hands On Exercises This section of the course will be hands on configuration exercises. The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is otTered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POS IT RON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe County, FL Page 20 of 89 July 16,2002 LifeLine 100 Technical Traininl! By the end of this course, participants will know how to: · Install the LifeLine 100 E9ll Controller · Program/Configure LL-100 E9ll Controllers · Maintain and Troubleshoot LL-100 E9l1 Controller Benefits The LifeLine 100 E9ll Controller is the heart of the 911 System. Understanding, building and configuring LifeLine 100 is essential to the installation and configuration of all other components in the total family of IWS products. This hands on course provides the groundwork needed to successfully install an E911 system. Who Should Attend This Course is intended to those individuals having to install LifeLine 100 equipment in preparation for the installation of lAP and IWS software solutions. Prerequisites Learners coming into this course should have prerequisite knowledge of · U sing a terminal emulation program · RS-232 and data communication concepts . RS-422 Concepts · Microprocessor based systems. · POTS, lA2, PBX, DID trunks and Central office operations. Ideally individuals coming into this class will have already installed 911 trunks in a PSAP and understand how they work. Duration of Course Five days Course Content Introducing LifeLine 100 as E911 equipment Operating the E9-1-1 · E9-l-1 trunking operation including ANI · Introducing an All Database The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POSITRON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe eounty, FL Page 21 of 89 July 16, 2002 Identifying Peripheral Equipment for E9-1-1 Operating peripheral equipment . Connecting to a CAD . Integrating to an ACD . Operating the Maintenance Terminal · Installing a Maintenance Printer . Installing a ACDR Printer Identifying Configurations for LifeLine 100 Understanding Transfer Types . Performing a Voice Transfer · Performing a Data Transfer · Performing a 911 Transfer Configuring the LifeLine 100 System Operating LifeLine 100 Hardware Identifying LifeLine 100 hardware . COM Module . SIO Module . MCM Module · SIG Module . NIM Module . CLIC Module . KSI Module Identifying AC/DC power supplies Identifying Optional DC supplies Identifying Ringing Generator The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POSITRON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe eounty, FL Page 22 of 89 July 16,2002 Identifying 10 V AC/SIG Installing LifeLine 100 components · LifeLine 100 System Cabinet · Integrating to a lA2 key system . Alarms . Optional Recorder . Optional CUC'S . External Peripherals . Maintenance Terminal . Maintenance Printer I: Maintenance ACDR Printer Cross connection lA2/ACD . Concentrator . Interconnect Panel . Batteries . Power . Ground . EL displays Configuring LifeLine 100 System · Configuring the Single Shelf option · Configuring the Multi Shelf option Programming LifeLine 100 Testing the system Troubleshooting techniques Review The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POSITRON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe County, FL Page 23 of 89 July 16, 2002 Power 911 Installation & Confie:uration By the end of this course, learners will know how to: . Identify the Components of a Power 911 Network . Identify Minimum Hardware Requirements . Install Windows NT Server 4.0 and NT Workstation 4.0 Configured for Power 911 . Configure Hardware/Software Components . Install and Configure Power 911 and Configurator . Bring the Power 911 Client/Server and Workgroup Network Up and Running . Navigate the Configurator . Use database control functions . Configure Trunks, Positions, Agencies, Incidents, Agents and System data . Configure a new Site using regional infonnation . Import a Pre-configured Data file Benefits This intensive course is designed to provide a working understanding of the installation and configuration of Power 911. As hands on, lab oriented class, learners will build and configure a Power 911 software network from beginning to completion. Who Should Attend This course is designed for technical support professionals and other individuals who will be installing Power 911 networks. It is also a prerequisite course for other IWS software installation courses. Prerequisites for this course are LifeLine 100 Technical Training (#960100,960150,960200 or 960250), lAP Plus Technical Training (#960300,930350,960400 or 960450) and Windows NT 4.0 for Public Safety (#960700, 960750, 960705 or 960710) Duration of Course Five days Course Content The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is otfered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POS IT RON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe County, FL Page 24 of 89 July 16, 2002 Identifying the Components of a Power 911 Network . Introduction to the Power 911 system . Identify a Client/Server installation versus a PowerLite installation . Check list and identification of all Network components . Description of each network component function . Description of Microsoft SQL function . Description of the Object Server function Identifying Minimum Hardware Requirements . Verifying the hardware components installed . Verify which components need to be installed Installing Windows NT Server 4.0 and NT Workstation 4.0 . Installing Windows NT Server 4.0 . Installing Windows NT Workstation 4.0 . Customize Windows NT Installing and Configure Power 911 and Configurator . Install Power 911 Object Server . Install Power 911 Workstation . Configure the POWER 911.00 file . Verify all Network settings . Configure the ODBC Bringing the Power 911 Network Up and Running . Connect all components of the Power 911 network . Verify all settings and connections on the Check list . Bring the network up and functioning The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POS IT RON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe County, FL Page 25 of 89 July 16, 2002 Navigating the Configurator · Logging On to Configurator · Using the File Menu Use database control functions · Expanding and Collapsing Data Views · Managing Table Content · Configuring Properties · Referencing and Linking Configuring Trunk Data · Introduction to Trunk Data · Configuring Trunk Groups · Configuring Trunks · Configuring NPA's · Configuring NNX's Configuring Position Data · Introduction to Positions · Configuring Positions Configuring Agency Data · Introduction to Agency Data · Configuring ESN's · Establishing Agency Types · Creating Templates · Establishing Agencies Configuring Incident Data · Introduction to Incident Data The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POS IT RON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe County, FL Page 26 of 89 July 16, 2002 · Introduction to Incident Data · Establishing Incident Priorities · Providing Generic TDD Questions · Creating Incident Types · Establishing Incident States Configuring Agent Data . Introduction to Agent Data . Creating Profiles . Creating Dynamic Lists . Preparing Feature Buttons . Preparing Line Buttons . Preparing Macro Buttons . Preparing Queue Buttons . Preparing Primary Transfer Buttons . Preparing Secondary Transfer Buttons . Preparing Agent Groups . Preparing Agents Configure System Data · Introduction to System Data · Introduction to System Data Configuration · Configuring Systems Importing a Configuration · Introduction to Importing a Configuration from another source · Creating a Local Copy · Modifying the Configuration Writing Standard Operating Procedures (SOP) · Introduction to SOP's The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POS IT RON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe County, FL Page 27 of 89 July 16, 2002 · Writing an SOP · Modifying a pre-written SOP · Preparing the SOP for use in Power 911 ~ Configure A New Site Using Regional Information on Pre-prepared Forms Hands On Exercises The majority of this course will be hands on and will entail building a complete Power 911 network. After the network has been completed it will be configured using data files. The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POSITRON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe eounty, FL Page 28 of 89 July 16, 2002 16. Maintenance Agreement 16.1 Maintenance Program Maintenance of all new equipment installed as a result of this RFP shall have a one (1) year warranty rnaintenance program starting upon final acceptance of the entire system. Monroe County's previously purchased equipment is currently under a long term maintenance agreement. I Positron Response: Comply 16.2 Support Access Both warranty and contract maintenance shall be provided on a seven days a week, twenty-four (24) hours a day basis, to include weekends and holidays. In addition, the Bidder shall provide a 1-800- number phone access to Bidder's own technical support twenty-four (24)-hours a day basis, to include weekends and holidays. Positron Response: Comply Positron's Technical Customer Support department is a growing department with over 30 people including 24 qualified technicians dedicated to providing the highest level of telephone and field support to its customers. The department combines a centralized Help Desk and 7 Field Support offices. The department is ISO 9001 certified. The Technical Customer Support department is also responsible for answering Engineering Complaints and issuing Technical Advisories to its customer base. Positron offers varying levels of Service Level Agreements which define all aspects of the level of responsibility for problem handling. The Technical Customer Support Group maintains a 7x24 Help Desk accessible through a toll ! free hotline, The Help Desk provides complete technical support and assistance to the caller I for all Positron products. The Help Desk is aided by a fully automated, BellCore compliant Help Desk support system which uses heuristic programming to provide complete problem information recording and troubleshooting assistance. When a call comes in, it is quickly answered by dedicated Help Desk Agents, The Agent takes the caller's general information such caller identification, system description, problem description and call back information. The caller is given a reference number for the trouble ticket and is passed onto a Help Desk Technician for problem resolution. If there are no Help Desk Technicians currently available, the caller is called back within 30 minutes. The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POSITRON [t may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe County, FL Page 29 of 89 July 16, 2002 The Help Desk Technician determines the nature, severity and priority of the call. The Help Desk Agent then works over the phone and through dial-in facilities to troubleshoot and resolve the problem with positive feedback and closure from the caller. Problems which are not resolved within predefined time limits are automatically escalated to senior management within Sales, Product Management and Engineering for action. The Technical Customer Support department personnel are fully trained on all components and infrastructure of its products, including: · All Positron Engineered hardware including the Life Line 100, lAP, lAP Plus, and Express TDD. · All Positron developed software, including Power 911, Power MIS, and Power MAP. · All infrastructure equipment purchased from Positron, including networking equipment, PCs, operating systems, peripherals, UPS and alarms. The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POS IT RON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe County, FL Page 30 of 89 July 16, 2002 Positron works with all callers to identify the root cause of the problem, whether resulting from its equipment or software, or another vendor's equipment which is having an impact on the normal operation of Positron systems. Troubleshooting assistance stops once a problem has been demonstrated to be another vendor's equipment. Positron does not provide technical assistance for other vendor's equipment outside of this identification. 16.3 Critical Maintenance Critical Maintenance Requirement is defined as any problem that jeopardizes or degrades the overall performance of the system. The Bidder shall provide in their technical proposal their response times to the PSAP in any eritical Maintenance Requirement. The areas covered under Critical are: Networking, ANI and All Controllers, Electronic Sets, Displays, Telephone Controller Equipment, Continuous Printer(s) and Display Terminal(s). Bidders must define their maxirnum response time parameters. Positron Response: Comply Response Times for Repair Services Priority Setting At PPSS, we base our response time - and the actions we take to resolve a problem on the impact of the problem on your operations. The following table provides our priority level definitions and response objectives - the more critical the operational impact the higher the priority. We ask you to confirm your commitment to providing the assistance that we will require to resolve your problem in accordance with the priority level established. If you are unable to provide the commitment identified, the priority level may be downgraded accordingly. The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is olTered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POS IT RON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe County, FL Page 31 of89 July 16,2002 Targeted Status Severity Description Call update Center response time 1 Product failure/Loss of serviu 15 minutes On-line This class of problem is service affecting and deemed an on-going critical problem which requires immediate action. Service affecting where service lost means ability of Center to properly perform their duties and no work-around is available Such problems would involve system failure, major loss of functionality, which renders the part of the system inoperable. Such as loss of voice, TDD, abilitv to transfer calls. 2 Severely impaired functionality 30 minutes Daily This class of problem is a feature affecting and deemed an on- going problem that requires immediate action. Feature affecting means loss of a feature that limits the ability of the Center to perform their duties but the core abilities are unaffected. Such problems would involve the failure of or loss of functionality of any non-critical functional component/feature, however the system is still operable. 3 Non critical system failure ( Non service affecting) During Daily business This class of problem requires action from the Support Center hours within a short time. Such problems may cause performance degradation or system components to not function according to specification. 4 Minor problem or query During Weekly business This class of problem is non-service affecting. It includes incorrect hours operation of minor functionality or system components that are infrequently used, and problems which have feasible work-around available. Categorization of which components are non-critical will be agreed on a customer basis, depending on their system configuration. The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POSITRON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp, Monroe eounty, FL Page 32 of 89 July 16, 2002 16.4 Normal Maintenance Normal Maintenance Requirements is defined as those problems that do not affect the overall performance of the system, but still require attention. The Bidder shall provide in their technical proposal their response times to the PSAP under Normal Maintenance Requirement. Bidders must define their maxirnurn response time in parameters. Positron Response: Comply Please refer to table in section 16.3 for all response times. 16.5 Warranty, Spare Parts During the First Year New System Warranty Period following the date of final acceptance, the Bidder shall, upon notification by the PSAP Agency of any malfunction, make the necessary repairs, including labor and materials, at the Bidder's expense, for all new equipment purchased. Replacement and spare parts will be available for at least seven (7) years after final acceptance of the system. Should the manufacturer discontinue this product or cease to do business, the Bidder agrees to stock an adequate supply of components. Positron Response: Comply Please refer to warranty statement in section 1.9 - Geueral Requirements. 17 Service 17.1 Service Facility The Bidder shall identify the location of, or establish by the date of equipment delivery, a factory- trained and certified service facility equipped with the instrumentation necessary to provide service on the proposed system. Positron Response: Exception Positron is not proposing anyon-site maintenance services as part of this proposal. The in/ormation contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely lor the purpose of evaluation. II POSITRON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe eounty, FL Page 33 of 89 July 16, 2002 17.2 Service Report The Bidder shall furnish a service report to Monroe County, FL., E911 eo-ordinator upon completion of each maintenance call and maintain a service record for each piece of equiprnent serviced. A copy of this record shall be kept at the PSAP. The report at a minirnum shall include the following: A. Date and time notified (verified and initialed by PSAP Supervisor on Duty). B. Date and time of arrival (verified and initialed by PSAP Supervisor on duty.). C. Type and model number(s) of equipment serviced. D. Time spent for repair. E. Time the repair was completed. F. Service that was completed. G. Description of the rnalfunction. H. List of parts replaced. 1. Action taken to prevent reoccurrence. Positron Response: Exception Please refer to our response to Section 17.1 above. 18. Evaluation Criteria 18.1 General The Evaluation of all responses received will consist of any initial and final (detailed) review as follows: I Positron Response: Read & Understood 18.2 Initial Review The initial review will evaluate all submissions for conformance to stated guidelines, to eliminate all responses which would deviate substantially from the basic intent of the request. I Positron Response: Read & Understood The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POSITRON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Syste.s Corp. Monroe County, FL Page 34 of 89 July 16, 2002 18.3 Final Review The final review will consist of the following: . Evaluate the technical content of the offering to determine which total configuration will best satisfy successful development and implementation of an Enhanced 9-1-1 Emergency Communications System. The Bidder may be requested to give an oral presentation of their submission at their expense. . The Bidder's level of experience and financial stability in telecommunications. . Prices quoted for the system. . The Bidder's performance and service record with similar projects. I Positron Response: Read & Understood The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POS IT RON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe County, FL Page 35 of 89 July 16, 2002 SECTION II OVERVIEW / PROFILE OF RFP 2.0 Overview / Profile 2.1 Project Summary The City of Key West, Florida is building a new police adrninistration building at 1600 North Roosevelt Boulevard, Key West, Florida. The E9-1-1 PSAP will be relocated to this new facility. eurrently the City of Key West PSAP is located at 525 Angela Street in the eity of Key West and will be moving to the new location. Construction plans at this time indicate a E9-1-1 move date of November 15th, 2002. Bidders should take into consideration that this date is preliminary and construction changes could vary the actual move date. eurrently the eity of Key West E9-1-1 center consist of three (3) Positron lAP answering positions, supported by a Positron Life Line system. While this system is a fully enhanced 911 system, it also has an independent ALV ANI back up data base on site. BellSouth is the E9-1-1 service provider and has a long term maintenance agreernent for the on site equipment. I Positron Response: Read & Understood 2.2 New Facility The new E9-1-1 facility located at 1600 North Roosevelt Boulevard, Key West,Florida will consist of four (4) call taker positions. These positions will include lAP panel mount units, backroom equipment and a stand-alone database. This new facility will be upgraded to include four (4) Positron Power work-stations or equivalent to be compatible with Monroe eounty existing equipment. I Positron Response: Read & Understood The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POSITRON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe eounty, FL Page 36 of 89 July 16, 2002 2.3 Existing Equipment Monroe eounty, Florida is the owner of a large amount of recently purchased Positron 911 equipment. This equipment will be available to the successful bidder to utilize while constructing the new E9-1-1 center in the City of Key West, Florida. This should substantially reduce the cost of construction and facilitate this project. Bidders should request a inventory of this equipment to simplify the RFP process and minimize the new equipment purchases, I Positron Response: Read & Understood 2.4 Transition Both Monroe County and the City of Key West desire a turnkey transition for this project. To prevent any interruption in 911 service the new facility should be constructed, tested and functional prior to the actual cut-over date, while maintaining the existing facility in an operational mode at the old location. In this manner cut-over can be achieved by simply having the 911 service provider re- direct the 911 calls to new trunks installed at the new facility.. I Positron Response: Comply The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POS I T RON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe County, FL Page 37 of 89 July 16, 2002 SECTION III TECHNICAL SPECIFICATIONS. 3.0 TECHNICAL I EQUIPMENT SPECIFICATIONS 3.1 General Equipment Specifications The intent of these specifications is to provide a complete and satisfactory operating Enhanced 9-1-1 Emergency Communications System, with ANI and ALl for Key West, Monroe eounty, Florida Public Safety Answering Point (PSAP). All equipment and installation rnaterial required to fulfill the above shall be furnished and installed whether or not specifically enumerated herein. The installation will be handled as "turnkey proj ect," including delivery, installation and satisfactory check out of all equipment. Positron Response: Read & Understood Installation of all equipment and wiring will be the total responsibility of the Bidder. The Bidder will have total responsibility for systern compatibility and successful performance. The only work not included in the installation project would be work involving building construction (e.g., moving or adding any necessary doors, walls, etc.). I Positron Response: Read & Understood 3.2 Performance A distributed processor architecture shall be used so as to meet the performance demanded by an E9- 1-1 environment. Every module shall function independently of the others. There should be no situation in which a processing bottleneck could occur. Positron Response: Comply The non-blocking design of the Life Line 100 controller ensures that all calls can be processed simultaneously, eliminating any potential bottlenecks. Each Network Interface Module (NIM) is connected to only one 9-1-1 trunk. System reliability is enhanced by Life Line 100's distributed microprocessor architecture allowing each module to operate under its own control. This independent operation ensures no single point of failure. Built-in redundant, hot stand-by modules ensures uninterrupted service and makes the Life Line 100 ideally suited to critical E9-1-1 applications. The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POSITRON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe County, FL Page 38 of 89 July 16, 2002 The existing Life Line 100 controller is fully compatible with AT&T database communication protocol, and transmits requests for ALl information to the ALl database on two ports. Each call processing module shall be equipped with a dedicated MF receiver to avoid delays in decoding ANI. (Systems which force incoming calls to wait for an available MF receiver before presenting the call will be given secondary consideration.) Positron Response: Comply The NIM module in the Life Line 100 is designed to perform call processing, central office interface and telephone set functions. One NIM card is provided for each incoming E9-1-1 trunk. Every NIM performs its functions independently of the other NIMs on the shelf. This includes the reception and decoding of MF tones. Every NIM module has a built-in MF receiver to ensure a total non-blocking architecture. eommunication with the ALl database shall be full duplex. I Positron Response: Comply ALl requests shall be made immediately after ANI has been decoded. (Systems which wait for the call taker to go off-hook before sending requests for ALl will be given secondary consideration). I Positron Response: Comply 3.3 Reliability No single point of failure will render the system non-functional. Positron Response: Comply Positron has configured the proposed Life Line 100 controller to include full redundancy. The following describes the redundancy features available on the proposed Life Line 100 E9-1-1 system. Power The Life Line 100 AC/DC module provides DC power to the system and offers the possibility of recharging the battery backup module, if installed. The AC/DC module is installed redundantly on each shelf. Therefore, when redundant modules are available, one module provides power to the system and the other remains on standby. The inactive AC/DC module becomes functional if the first one fails. The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POSITRON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe County, FL Page 39 of89 July 16,2002 Conclusion: No single point offailure. Communications Module The eOM module communicates with all modules on a per shelf basis, each via independent links. It also provides cornmunication to external devices such as the ALl database and all other system administrative ports. Battery backup is provided for the clock/calendar and RAM banks by an on- board lithium battery. The eOM module on each shelf is configured for redundancy. One module then operates in Active rnode, and the other in Standby mode. Each module monitors the health of the other by monitoring hardware handshaking signals, as well as those generated by the software. The standby module becomes functional if the first one fails. Conclusion: No single point offailure. Serial I/O Module The SIO module provides communication with up to twelve displays on a per shelf basis. Independent ports and links are provided to each display. A failure of one port or link does not cause a complete rnodule failure. Each display can operate independently of another. The SIO module on each shelf is configured for redundancy. One module operates in Active mode, and the other in Standby rnode. Each module monitors the health of the other by monitoring hardware handshaking signals, as well as those generated by the software. The standby rnodule becomes functional if the first one fails. Conclusion: No single point offailure. The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POS IT RON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe eounty, FL Page 40 of 89 July 16,2002 Si2nalin2 Module The SIG rnodule provides the generation of both lamping and ringing. The lamping generator converts -48 VDe from the Life Line 100 into 10 V Ae. This provides a lamping battery source on lA2 key signaling equipment. The ringing generator converts -48 VDC frorn the Life Line 100 into 105 V Ae. This provides a ringing battery source for application to a network or to an external ringing device. The SIG module on each shelf is configured for redundancy. One module operates in Active mode, and the other in Standby mode. The NIM modules monitor the lamping and ringing and autornatically cause the switchover of the SIG module. The standby module becomes functional if the first one fails. With the Positron Life Line 100, should any module fail that will not allow the presentation of a call, the system can automatically busy-out the associated 9-1-1 trunk to the CO. This alerts the CO of a problem immediately. Any failure within the system will also create an alarm condition. This can be either a local alarm, a remote alarm, or both. This ensures immediate attention, <;:ven when rnodules are installed redundantly. Conclusion: No single point offailure. Network Interface Module The NIM module is designed to perform call processing, central office interface and telephone set functions. The NIM Module cannot be installed redundantly due to the inability of the network to provide redundant 9-1-1 trunks. However, all major components on the NIM module are redundant. These include: (a) Call progress tone generator (b) eall progress tone receiver (c) DTMF receiver (d) DTMF generator (e) Ringing voltage selection (f) Ringing voltage detection Every NIM performs its functions independently of the COM module, or other NIMs on the shelf. This includes the reception and decoding ofMF tones. Every NIM module has a built-in MF receiver to ensure a total non-blocking architecture. The COM module only provides the NIM with configuration information. The NIM provides the COM module with ANI information, agent connection/disconnection information, as well as statistical, maintenance, and other information related to call processing. Should one module fail, it affects only the trunk associated with that module and does not create a complete system failure. Conclusion: No single point offailure. The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POSIT RON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe eounty, FL Page 41 of 89 July 16,2002 Processing power shall be distributed among the E9-1-1 controller modules. There will be no central controlling module, and all modules shall function independently of each other. I Positron Response: Comply Each line interface / call processing rnodule will serve one trunk, one call taker, and one transfer position. The state of a line interface/call processing module shall have no effect on the performance of another. This is necessary in order to prevent heavy trunk traffic, false trunk seizures, line failures, or defective line interface/call processing cards from affecting service to trunks handled by other line interface/call processing cards on the E9-1-1 controller. I Positron Response: Comply Hardware redundancy and automatic switchover shall be provided on the various modules where appropriate. I Positron Response: Comply Modules that provide communication to external devices such as ALl databases and all other system administrative ports shall be configured with redundancy. One module shall operate in an active mode and the other in standby mode. The standby module shall become functional automatically if the first one fails. Positron Response: Comply The COM modules in the Life Line 100 controller provide this functionality and are configured redundantly, as described previously. Modules that provide communication to ANY ALl display shall be configured with redundancy. One module shall operate in an active mode and the other in standby mode. The standby module shall become functional automatically if the first one fails. Positron Response: Comply The COM modules in the Life Line 100 controller provide this functionality and are configured redundantly, as described previously, The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POSITRON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe County, FL Page 42 of 89 July 16, 2002 If the module provides communication to more than one display, independent ports and links shall be provided to each display. A failure of one port or link shall not cause a cornplete module failure. Each display shall operate independently of another. Positron Response: Comply The SIO modules in the Life Line 100 controller provide this functionality and are configured redundantly, as described previously. All power supplies shall be redundant and distributed. A power related fault on a E9-1-1 controller module shall not affect the power supplied to other modules. Positron Response: Comply Power for the Life Line 100 components is provided via redundant AC!DC modules on each Life Line 100 shelf. It shall not be necessary to power down the E9-1-1 controller in order to replace modules. In addition, it shall be possible to remove redundant modules that are in standby mode from the E9-1-1 controller without any interruption in service. All redundant modules shall be accessible directly from the front of the controller without the need of removing cables frorn the rear of the controller or module. I Positron Response: Comply De power battery backup for the E9-1-1 controller shall be provided as an option. I Positron Response: Comply 3,4 Expansion The E9-1-1 controller shall be modular, supporting from one (1) to over (l00) E9-1-1 Trunks in increments of One (l) Trunk with appropriate additional equipment. The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POSITRON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe County, FL Page 43 of 89 July 16,2002 Positron Response: Comply The Life Line 100 eontroller has been engineered to meet the strict demands of E9-1-1 Emergency response. The built-in modularity allows customers to design a system capable of meeting current needs and budget with easy future expandability. The following sumrnary provides basic information on system expandability: · The Life Line 100 controller equipment is contained in seven (7) foot Cabinets. Each cabinet can hold up to three (3) shelves of controller equipment. · Each controller requires a minimum of one (1) shelf, which may be expanded to sufficient shelves to accommodate over 100 trunks. · Each shelf is capable of containing from one to eight 9-1-1 trunk cards (NIM Cards) and in most applications each shelf can provide up to twelve display ports for call-taker displays. (Particular configurations may cause variations). The addition of call-taker positions or extra 9-1-1 trunks may be as easy as just adding additional telephones and displays or NIM cards to the existing system. In some instances it may be necessary to add an additional shelf (and possibly cabinet) in order to expand to a given number of positions or trunks. Each controller shelf shall accomrnodate up to Eight (8) E9-1-1 Trunks. It shall be possible to populate any empty Trunk card slot sirnply by adding a Trunk Interface eard, without requiring software or hardware upgrades (other than the additional Trunk Interface cards). I Positron Response: Comply Answering Position handling shall be modular as well, with the ability to scale from 1 to over 100 answering positions with appropriate additional equipment. I Positron Response: Comply 3.5 Specific E911 Controller System Features All features described in this section relate to North American Standards for E9-1-1 systems in both trunking and central office features. I Positron Response: Read & Understood The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POSITRON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe County, FL Page 44 of 89 July 16, 2002 3.5a Voice Transfers The E9-1-1 controller shall be equipped to perform tandem voice transfers. Voice transfers may be either speed or manually dialed. Once a transfer connection is established, the equipment will allow a three-party voice conference. Positron Response: Comply The Life Line 100 executes requests for dial-up line voice transfers. It is equipped to perform voice transfers directly within the unit, or alternatively at a tandem CO. Voice transfers may be either speed or manually dialed. A Life Line unit may be connected to up to eight dial-up transfer lines per full shelf. When a transfer connection has been established, a three-party voice conference can be held. The unit gives the call taker the option to mute the 9-1-1 caller in order to speak confidentially with the transfer position. The transfer position may do the same provided it is equipped with a Positron ANI/ALl display and control device, and a telephone link to the Life Line Unit. The voice transfers feature allows each call taker transfer button to be programmed with up to four telephone numbers to the same destination. This feature is attractive when a destination is equipped with two, three, or four telephone lines. If a first request to transfer to this position is met with a busy signal, a call taker could immediately ring the same destination via up to three alternate lines by simply touching the same transfer key a second, third, or fourth time. 3.5b Incoming Trunks The E9-1-1 controller shall be equipped for a customer defined number of E9-1-1 Trunks, with each trunk card individually configurable to either standard CAMA with MF signaling, or to Enhanced MF for 10/20 digit handling. Positron Response: Comply Positron has sized its system to accommodate 8 E9-1-1 trunks. 3.5c Logging Recorder Interfaces The proposed system shall provide start signals for logging recorders and call check conversation recorders. The start signal should be activated when the call taker goes off hook, and deactivated when the call is released. The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POS IT RON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe eounty, FL Page 45 of 89 July 16, 2002 Positron Response: Comply The proposed Life Line 100 includes a recorder feature which provides the control signals necessary to record the conversation between an incoming caller, an answering agent, and/or a third party. The Life Line system provides nine (9) dry contact recorder start leads per shelf. This permits connection of up to eight single track recorders per shelf (one per answering position line) and/or one 8 track recorder per shelf. Recorders are started when an agent answers an incoming call. Recorders are stopped when the call is released. Alternatively recorders may be connected directly to the answering position equipment. It should also be noted that each Power 911 position will include the Power 911 Integrated Call Recorder module. 3.Sd Buzzer/Relay Contacts Four independent solid state relay contacts shall be available for switching of AC or DC powered devices. Two of the contacts shall be controlled by the call processing modules and will allow selective ringing depending on which trunk is originating the call. The two remaining relay contacts shall respond to open or close commands entered as DTMF tones dialed from call taker telephone set keypads (for remote control of doors, air conditioners,...) I Positron Response: Comply 3.Se Alarms Three alarm levels will be generated in response to abnormal occurrences requiring the attention of maintenance or supervising personnel: Minor. Major. Critical. Four solid state relay contacts shall be provided, three of which correspond to an alarm level. The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POS IT RON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe County, FL Page 46 of 89 July 16, 2002 Positron Response: Comply In order for maintenance personnel to be alerted when trouble conditions are detected by the Life Line, trouble conditions must be classified according to their level of gravity. Trouble conditions are classified as shelf down, critical, major, or minor. Each existing trouble condition must be assigned a critical alarm, a major alarm, a minor alarm or no alarm. In addition, a threshold can be assigned to different types of trouble conditions. This threshold indicates the number of times an alarm condition must occur before a higher alarm level is triggered. Critical, major, and minor alarms are alerted by alarm indicators. Alarm indicators include visual signals (LEDs), audible signals (buzzer or beeping on maintenance terminal), and/or calls to a remote diagnostic monitoring and maintenance service center. 3.6 Maintenance Terminal A maintenance terminal interface shall provide the following interaction with the E9-1-1 controller: Diagnostic mode To display all event, diagnostic and error messages as they occur. Maintenance mode To prograrn and configure the E9-1-1 controller (program interface parameters, assign telephone numbers, reset alarms, generate reports, select options). The programming and configuration procedure shall rnake use of a hierarchical menu structure. Once the desired sub-menu is reached, most entries shall be made by selecting a nurnber from a list. Maintenance mode shall be password protected to ensure system security. Positron Response: Comply Positron has configured the proposed Life Line 100 controller to include Remote Monitoring and Maintenance capabilities via a diagnostic terminal. As the remote maintenance (diagnostics) terminal performs the same function as the local maintenance terminal, the latter is described first. Maintenance Terminal The maintenance terminal is the main programmer's, administrator's, and maintenance technician's interface with the system. In diagnostic mode, the terminal displays all event, diagnostic, and error messages as they occur, The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POSITRON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe County, FL Page 47 of 89 July 16, 2002 In maintenance mode, Life Line is programmed and configured via the terminal. The terminal's maintenance mode is typically used to program interface parameters, assign telephone numbers, reset alarms, generate reports, and select options. The programming and configuration procedure is facilitated by a hierarchical menu structure. Once the desired sub- menu has been reached, most entries are made by selecting a number from a list. Maintenance mode is password protected for security of the system. Maintenance Printer The maintenance printer prints a hard copy of system error messages appearing on the maintenance terminal. A hard copy record of system messages is essential for diagnosing and debugging. In programming this feature, the customer has the option of also directing status and diagnostic messages to this printer. The printer is also used for printing statistical reports, as well as the contents of the alarm and error history buffers. Statistical Reports The system maintains statistics on database communications, trunk and line traffic. Also retained is a chronological history of alarm and error messages. Reports of this data may be sent to the maintenance printer upon request of the system supervisor. This information can be indispensable to maintenance and administration personnel. Remote Dia2nostics The remote maintenance (diagnostics) terminal performs the same function as the local maintenance terminal previously described. The remote terminal is an invaluable time saving feature when maintenance personnel operate from a center located off the premises of the Life Line installation. Since the display is connected to the Life Line via the public telephone network, a terminal at a central maintenance depot can serve a number of Life Line installations. The Life Line unit equipped with the remote maintenance terminal feature can both receive and originate calls to the maintenance center. The Life Line receives a call from the remote maintenance terminal whenever intervention is required from the maintenance center. After a connection has been established, maintenance specialists can fully communicate with the system. The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POSITRON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe eounty, FL Page 48 of 89 July 16, 2002 The Life Line can be programmed to originate a call to up to four maintenance centers upon occurrence of an alarm. When an alarm occurs, the system will sequentially dial up to three telephone numbers until an answer is received and tbe answering remote site logs on with a valid password. Failing that, the system dials a fourtb number expected to be the location of a data dump. If this station does not answer, part or all of this calling sequence will be re- attempted depending on how the system was programmed to react to this situation. 3.7 Maintenance Printer A maintenance printer interface shall drive a printer to provide hard copy of system error messages. I Positron Response: Comply 3.8 Statistical Reports The E9-1-1 controller system shall maintain statistics on: . Database communications. . Trunk traffic. . Chronological history of alarm and error rnessages. Positron Response: Comply The proposed Life Line 100 E9-1-1 controller has built-in statistical reports. In addition, the optional Power MIS software can provide additional management reports. The built-in statistical reports are described below. Built-in Statistical Reports Statistical Reports consist of various counters that keep track of system activity, incoming call traffic, database communications, and incoming trunk/line traffic. These reports are output to I the maintenance terminal and maintenance printer. In addition, these reports can be reset and printed manually or automatically. Each time a report is reset, it is printed prior to the reset. The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POSITRON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe eounty, FL Page 49 of 89 July 16, 2002 Incomine Call Traffic & Performance · Number of processed and test calls · Number of abandoned calls · Number of calls with good ANI · Number of calls with good ALl · N umber of calls with bad or no ALl · Number of executed transfer requests Database Communications Performance · Number of ALl with no Type · Number of Type 1 received · Number of Type 2 received · Number of No ALl Found . Number of ALl errors · Number of unanswered requests Incomine Trunk/Line Traffic & Performance for Each TrunklLine: · Number of calls on that trunk · Number of times tone errors detected · Number of times incomplete ANI received · Number of times no tone error detected . Number of abandoned calls 3.8a Automation Call Detail Record Printer An ACDR printer interface shall be provided. An automatic call detail record (ACDR) shall be printed by the system every time a call is released. The information contained in each AeDR includes: · The caller's ANI and ALL · Position of agent that answered the call. · Transferred destination. · Date, times of the various connect and disconnect events, and other particulars relating to a call. · A time and date stamp is automatically printed every hour. · Incoming trunk Identification I Positron Response: Comply The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POSITRON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe County, FL Page 50 of 89 July 16, 2002 3.9 ALl Database The E9-1-1 controller shall support dedicated redundant data links to the TelcoALl database and the redundant stand-alone on site database. A request to the database shall be made as soon as caller ANI is received. The E9-1-1 controller shall cornpare the telephone number returned with the ALl to the original ANI sent by the CO, ensuring that caller ALl is rnatched with ANI. If the received ALl is unclear or incomplete, a call taker must be able to comrnand the system to repeat the request to the database. The stand-alone database shall be updated upon installation and will be an automatic transfer function upon loss of enhanced telco provided enhanced 911 trunks. I Positron Response: Comply The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POSITRON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe eounty, FL Page 51 of 89 July 16, 2002 SECTION IV TELEPHONY FEATURES. 4.0 Telephony Equipment Features 4.1 General Requirements The proposed system shall be capable of operating in a mixed environment whereby: · Some answering positions are equipped with a desktop or panel-mounted phone set under control of an Intelligent Workstation (rwS) computer, and · Other positions are equipped with a "virtual" phone set located within the IWS workstation computer which controls it (i.e. there is no external phone set at the position). Regardless of which approach is used at a given position, the Intelligent Workstation computer shall have control of telephony functions (specifically, when a separate phone set is used, the call-taker can perform ALL telephone functions via the Intelligent Workstation using the external set only as a backup or alternate). The required number of IWS positions equipped with external phone sets is 4. The required number of IWS positions equipped with "virtual" phone sets is O. I Positron Response: Comply 4.2 Distributed Architecture Each module shall operate under control of its own microprocessor. There shall be no single point of failure affecting more than one line or one console. The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POSITRON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe County, FL Page 52 of 89 July 16, 2002 Positron Response: Comply Life Line 100 The Positron Life Line 100 controller has been engineered to meet the strict demands of E9-1-1 emergency response. The non-blocking design of the Life Line 100 ensures that all calls can be processed simultaneously, eliminating any potential bottlenecks. System reliability is enhanced by the Life Line 100's distributed microprocessor architecture allowing each module to operate under its own control. This independent operation ensures no single point of failure. Power 911 Power 911 offers the following fault tolerance features: Failure of a workstation: No effect on other positions or on the Power 911 network. In addition, should a workstation fail while the calltaker is speaking with a caller, voice contact with that caller is maintained. Failure of the network hub: All positions continue to operate, although information will not be shared between workstations. The workstations will continue to store all information locally. When the network resumes normal operation, the Database Server will be updated with the locally stored information, which will then be available to all positions. Failure of the Database Server: All positions continue to operate, and information is still shared between workstations, as the Power 911 network is configured with redundant virtual object servers, one of which resides on the Database Server, the other of which runs on one of the Workstations. When the network resumes normal operation, the Database Server will be updated. Failure of the Comm Server: (if system is equipped with the optional Communications Server) The transmission of ANI! ALl data will not be possible via Fax Transmission. Dial-up data transmission to remote serial printers will still be possible via the Life Line 100 E9-1-1 controller. The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POSIT RON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe County, FL Page 53 of 89 July 16,2002 4.3 Modularity / Flexibility The design shall be modular to allow for future expansion beyond present requirements. I Positron Response: Comply The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered soiely for the purpose of evaluation. II POSITRON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe County, FL Page 54 of 89 July 16, 2002 SECTION V INTELLIGENT WORKSTATIONS 5.0 Intelligent Workstations 5.1 General Requirements Four (4) PC-based Intelligent Workstations are required. These must be fully 32-bit applications running under the fully 32-bit Windows NT environment. Windows 9x and/or 16- bit code are not considered stable enough and will therefore not be considered. A true Microsoft SQL database shall provide data storage for both configuration and operational data. This is meant to ensure the use of an enterprise-class database engine that is robust and widely supported. Office application-class database engines (such as Paradox, FoxPro, Access, etc.) are not considered robust enough for an emergency-response environment and therefore do not meet this criteria. Workstations and servers shall be manufactured by Compaq, and equipped with at a minimum PII-450 MHz Intel Processors, 128M RAM and a 17-inch flat screen monitor. Positron Response: Comply Power 911 Features The Positron Power 911 Intelligent Workstation is an advanced integrated computer based open workstation for 9-1-1 call-takers, dispatchers and supervisors. The system's open architecture operates through a Microsoft Windows NT graphical user interface and can run on a variety of PC platforms. The Positron Power 9-1-1 system places a sophisticated and powerful package of computer telephony tools, user screens and database interfaces at the call-taker's fingertips. The systern is intuitive and dynamic, presenting the call-taker with interactive prompting, notification of database modifications and data networking. The system also allows extensive customization capabilities to meet specific PSAP requirements. The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POSITRON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe County, FL Page 55 of 89 July 16, 2002 Typical Power 911 GUI Computer Telephony ~ Module Flash Bulletin Module Incident Detail Module Lists Module Database Access Module Contact Module The Power 9-1-1 Intelligent Workstation can be configured to include the following features: (a) Number/Location Identification - The Power 911 Intelligent Workstation offers a great deal of flexibility in handling ANV ALl information. For example, while the incoming ANI and ALl information resides permanently in the database the information is presented to the call- taker in a data entry mode which allows call-takers to modify the information without affecting the original ANI! ALl data. All information is easily shared between call-takers. (b) System Toolbar - The Power 911 Intelligent Workstation provides the ability to program buttons to allow for "point & click" access to frequently used features and commands such as fast coding of incident, deferred dispatch, and print on demand, as well as starting up other Windows NT executables. (c) Supervisory Functions and Call Lists - The Power 911 Intelligent Workstation offers the supervisor and PSAP managers a package of data handling tools. These tools allow the viewing ofthe center's activity as it happens, and the ability to see detailed information on active or historical calls. Supervisors and managers have the capability of filtering and viewing data in any number of ways, including viewing all active calls and all abandoned calls. Multiple filters are available which can be combined to view information in even greater detail. The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is otTered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II pos I T RON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe County, FL Page 56 of 89 July 16, 2002 (d) Message Board - The on-line message board provides the ability to broadcast of a visual message to all agents, a select group of agents, or even a particular agent logged in to the system without interrupting call-taker activities. Call-takers have the ability of acknowledging a message sent by the supervisor. The Message Board also provides configurable pre- programmed messages via both speed button and drop-down list. (e) Call Transfer Functions - The Power 911 Intelligent Workstation can greatly expand the variety and volume of information that can be transferred over the existing standard technology. The Workstation is programmable to recommend primary transfer destinations based on incident type. The call-taker has the ability to send different types of information such as ANI! ALl and additional location data. The workstation can simultaneously transfer this data to multiple locations such as Fire and Police over a variety of communication modes to access remote printers, fax machines, and even other Intelligent Workstations. (f) Telephone Functions - The Power 911 Intelligent Workstation allows call-takers to have on- screen access to all telephone features and provides up to five (5) different call queues which can be configured with different line types and characteristics. These queues can be accessed by the mouse, and/or keyboard, and/or optional touchscreen. The call queue indicators also display critical real-tirne information such as: · The number of calls in a particular queue, · The time the oldest call has been in queue. · The trunk number or line number of an incoming call. · The various line status such as ringing or off-hook condition. The Power 911 Intelligent Workstation has the ability to show all trunks "nd lines associated with each individual queue. Lines are also accessible directly via a secondary line panel window, allowing calltakers to bypass the call queue to answer a specific line. The lines are also accessible to other call- takers after the initial answering of a call, which allows for both silent monitoring and barge-in type features. All standard telephone functions such as hold, hold indicator, redial, release, cancel, and transfer/conference, are available on-screen through the Intelligent Workstation. (g) Interpreter Key - The Power 911 Intelligent Workstation allows the call-taker to change the language of the pre-programmed questions presented to them in the (optional) Incident Detailing section ofthe screen, as well as the pre-programmed TDD questions (when using the optional integrated on-screen TDD). The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POSITRON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe eounty, FL Page 57 of 89 July 16, 2002 (h) Incident Detailing - The Power 911 Intelligent Workstation allows the call-taker to select a designated incident type, such as fire, auto accident, B & E, after the initial response from the caller. The Workstation then presents the call-taker with key questions relative to the ernergencyat hand. Priority questions are highlighted to prompt the call-taker to get the most important information first. The information is automatically stored in the system's database, and is available to all other call takers. Incident types are configurable by the PSAP to meet individual needs. (i) CAD Computer Interface - The Power 911 Intelligent Workstation provides a serial interface for a Computer Aided Dispatch System. This interface meets the AT&T interface standard and data sent via this interface consists of the caller's ANVALI exactly as received from the ALl database, as well as the call-taker's position number. The Intelligent Workstation can also be upgraded to provide full CAD functionality within the same system. (j) Premise Information Database - Power 911 IWS can also support a local database which provides call-takers immediate access to stored information about a specific location. This information may include building access, hazardous warnings, hazardous material information, structural plans, evacuation instructions, and site photos (in fact, virtually any type of information can be displayed, as this module uses the Microsoft Internet Explorer engine to display HTML-based content, with full hyperlinking support). The workstation automatically searches for existing information based on the caller's Al\J"I and prornpts the call-taker if additional data is available for reviewing. (k) Standard Operating Procedures (SOP) - The Power 911 IWS allows for the creation and viewing of a Standard Operating Procedures database. This feature assures procedures are applied in a uniform and consistent manner, in addition to providing training functionality. Based on the type of incident entered, the workstation prompts the call-taker that a procedure exists. Procedures rnay be displayed in a hypertext format, allowing call-takers to move quickly through the information presented to access key this module also uses the Microsoft Internet Explorer engine to display HTML-based content, with full hyperlinking support). The Intelligent Workstation also allows the inputting ofthird party SOPs, such as Power Phone or APCO procedures. The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POSITRON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe County, FL Page 58 of 89 July 16, 2002 Computer Specifications Positron is proposing the following workstations/server for this program: Workstation: eornpaq Evo D500 Minitower P4, 1.7 GHz 20GB EIDE Hard Drive - Smart III ATA/66 320MB pe 133 SDRAM Dual 16MB Video eard Integrated Intel Pro 10/100 VM Network PS2 Mouse PS2 Keyboard Dual eompaq 17-inch Monitors 48x eD-ROM Integrated Intel Audio with Premium Speakers Server: eompaq Proliant ML330-G2 P3, 1GHz 3 x 18.2GB SeSI Ultra2 Hard Drive 512MB DECC SDRAM 32x CD-ROM RAID Controller Integrated Autosensing 10/1 00 NIC PCI DIGI Accelport PS2 Mouse PS2 Keyboard Compaq 17-inch Monitor US Robotics External Modem 10/20GB Internal Tape Drive 5.2 Telephony Functions The Intelligent Workstation shall provide full Computer-Telephony Integration, allowing call-takers to have on-screen access to all telephone features. This should include call queues, up to five (5) in total, that can be configured with different line types and characteristics. The queues shall ensure that any calls in a particular Queue are handled in a first-come, first-serve basis. The call queue indicators should show the following types of information: . Number of calls in queue The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the pU'l'ose of evaluation. II POSITRON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe County, FL Page 59 of 89 July 16, 2002 . The tirne oldest call has been in queue · The trunk number or line number of the incoming call . Line status, i.e., ringing, off-hook The Intelligent Workstation must have the ability to show all trunks and lines associated with each individual queue. This should be a secondary window, through which lines and trunks are accessible, regardless of their status in any Queue. All standard telephone functions must be available through the Intelligent Workstation. These shall include the following as a minirnum: . Hold. . Dial. . Re-dial. . Release. . eancel. . Transfer / conference. · Speed Dial. Positron Response: Comply Power 911 offers full on-screen telephony. This is true regardless of whether the particular configuration has a phone set next to the answering position computer, all call handling can be performed via the workstation computer. Power 911 's Telephony Module is the central component for on-screen telephony. It can be configured for the following two layouts. In the first layout, there are five Queue buttons, each representing a separate queue fed by various line types, or in an ACD environment, one is assigned as the ACD Queue button. Voice recording controls are along the bottom right of the module. The second layout is similar except that there are three Queue buttons, and a multi-panel Feature Button array, to which the various features specific to the configured form of telephony (i.e. lAP Plus, lAP/PC, Meridian, etc.) can be mapped. These can also accommodate the call recording controls. Please refer to the following diagrams with regards to the feature descriptions which follow immediately after. The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluatiOll.11 POSITRON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe County, FL Page 60 of 89 July 16,2002 Telephony Module - Five Queue Buttons Telephone Control Buttons I Dial Entry Panel -!.. Telephone Display Panel -lr Queue or ~ ACe Buttons Telephone Control Buttons Media Control Buttons Telephony Module - Three Queue Buttons Telephone Control Buttons I Dial Entry Panel -!.. Telephone Display Panel -lr Queue or ~ ACe Buttons ";. Telephone Control Buttons Feature Buttons Panel The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is olTered soiely for the purpose of evaluation. II POSITRON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe County, FL Page 61 of 89 July 16, 2002 Hold I I I You can place a call on hold by clicking the HOLD button or by answering a second call without releasing the current call. When you answer a second call without releasing the current call, the current caller is automatically placed on hold. The Hold indicator area on the queue button becomes green and an "I" appears. To retrieve a call that was placed on hold, click the queue or ACD button that has the call on hold. The green Hold indicator area with the "I" on the queue button disappears. To retrieve a call from hold using the Line panel, right-click the queue button of the line that was placed on hold. The Line panel appears. Click the line that was placed on hold (A call placed on hold by you is indicated by flashing red and steady green Line Status indicators. When a call is placed on hold by another operator, the left Line Status indicator flashes red while the right Line Status indicator is unlit). To retrieve a call from hold using the Active Calls list, click Active Calls in the Lists module, then double-click the ID number of the call record in the ID column. Re-dial When you redial a telephone number, you call back a caller that either you previously spoke to or a caller that has called the emergency response center. This feature is also used to contact abandoned callers. To redial a telephone number, in the appropriate Calls List (i.e. Agent Calls, Abandoned Calls, etc...) in the Lists module, double-click the telephone number of the call record (it then appears in the Dial Entry panel of the Computer Telephony module). Click on the Redial button to initiate the redial. There is also a Last Number Redial capability. Pressing Redial displays the last number dialed! from that position. Pressing Redial again dials the number. Release Once the call has been handled, click on the orange Release button to release the call. The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POSITRON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe County, FL Page 62 of 89 July 16,2002 Cancel Transfer / Function Click on the Cancel button to cancel a transfer. Transfer/conference Conferencing allows you to talk to more than one person at a time. While on a call, you can set up a conference call by dialing the number (internal or external) of the party or selecting the party from the Contact module. Conferencing involves clicking the CONF button twice: the first time, to initiate the conference, and the second time, to establish it. However, you can transfer the call instead of setting up the conference. To do this, after clicking the CONF button (first time), click the TRANS button instead of the CONF button. To set up a conference call by entering a number, click CONF to initiate the conference (the CONF indicator flashes yellow and an "I" appears in the Hold indicator area of the queue or ACD button. The current call is placed on hold). Enter the number of the party you want to add to the conference, then click REDIAL. When the contact responds, you can do one of the following: · Click CONF to establish the conference (the CONF indicator becomes steady yellow and the "I" disappears from the Hold indicator area on the queue or ACD button. The contact has been added to the conference). · Click TRANS to transfer the call. You are automatically disconnected from the call. To set up a conference call with a contact from the Contact module, click a contact button in the Contact module to initiate the conference (the CONF indicator flashes yellow and an "I" appears in the Hold indicator area of the queue or ACD button. The current call is placed on hold). When the contact responds, you can either click CONF or TRANS as described above. To cancel a conference, click on the Cancel button. Please note that the procedure for setting up a conference call and the number of callers that can be conferenced depends on the telephone equipment used at the site. A minimum of three callers can participate in a conference. The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POS I T RON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe County, FL Page 63 of 89 July 16, 2002 Answer/Offbook Depending on setup, you can answer calls using ACD buttons or queue buttons. Power 911 can manage incoming calls into queues. Each queue is designed to handle specific trunk or line types, such as 9-1-1 trunks or administrative lines. The call that has been waiting the longest in a queue is automatically answered by clicking the queue button. To bypass the queue to answer a specific call, right-click a queue button to access the Line panel, then click the line you wish to answer (a line button is ringing when the left Line Status indicator flashes red, When you answer the call, the Line Status indicators become steady red and green. When a line is answered by another operator, the left Line Status indicator is steady red and the right Line Status indicator is unlit). To answer a call on an ACD button, simply click on the ringing ACD button. To answer a call from the Active Calls list (in the Lists module), double-click the ID number of the call record. While on a call, you can answer a second call by clicking a ringing queue, ACD or line button. This automatically places the current call on hold. Dial Power 911 allows you to place a call on a default outgoing line or on a line selected by the calltaker. To place a call you can either enter the telephone number of the destination or select an agency from the Contact module or the Extended Contact panel. When clicking a contact button, Power 911 automatically dials the telephone number for you. You can also place a call using the speed dial buttons (please refer to "Speed Dial" below for details ). To place a call on a default outgoing line, type the telephone number in the Dial Entry panel then click on the REDIAL button. To place a call on a line of your choice from the Line panel, right-click the appropriate queue button to display the Line panel, then click the desired line button. The cursor automatically moves to the Dial Entry. Type the number and hit REDIAL as before. To place a call using a queue button, click on it (an available line is automatically selected), then type the telephone number in the Dial Entry panel and hit REDIAL. The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POSITRON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe eounty, FL Page 64 of 89 July 16, 2002 To place a call to an emergency response agency, click the contact button on the Contact module or on the Extended Contact panel. Notes: . In order to make a call on a given line, it must be configured as outgoing. Selecting a line that is only incoming will result in a system message to the calltaker. . A site may be configured to automatically dial prefixes for telephone numbers with more than five digits. . Telephone numbers may be denoted with dashes, but it is not essential to include dashes. Speed dial To place a call from the Speed Dial panel, click the Speed Dial feature button to bring up the Speed Dial panel, then click the desired Speed Dial button. Mute transmit While on a call, you can mute yourself from the caller to speak privately with a third party such as a supervisor. Muting prevents the caller from hearing the conversation between you and the third party. However, it does not prevent you from hearing the caller. I To mute, click MUTE. The word MUTE on the button appears highlighted to indicate that the call is muted. To resume conversation with the caller, click MUTE. The word MUTE on the button is no longer highlighted; the caller is not muted. Line Status Indication Line status indication is done simultaneously in 3 ways: . Visually (and audibly for incoming) via the queue buttons, by displaying incoming, talk and hold through visual indicators . Via the line buttons, by presenting the lamping of the line . Via the Call Lists Module, which gives textual status of all active lines. Hook Flash or Equivalent Click on the Hook Flash button within the feature panel. Alternatively, Hook Flash can also be performed within a dial string by entering an "H". The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation, II, POS IT RON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe County, FL Page 65 of 89 July 16, 2002 Direct trunk/line access To access a particular trunk or line, right-click the appropriate queue button to display the Line panel, then click the desired line button. The Line panel provides up to 128 lines for each trunk group or queue button (lines are displayed 32 at a time, with Previous and Next buttons the other sets of 32). Oueuinl! A queue button provides audible and visual indications of incoming and outgoing calls. A trunk group label on each queue button identifies the trunk that is ringing. Each trunk may have its own distinctive ringing sound, which allows quick queue button identification. The number of Queue Buttons depends on the configuration used for the Telephony Module: . Three Queue Buttons and Feature Buttons panel, or . Five Queue Buttons (no Feature Buttons panel). A typical scenario is to have the first Queue button assigned to 9-1-1 Calls, the second to 7- Digit Emergency Calls, and a third to Non-Emergency (Administrative) lines. Right-clicking on a queue button opens the Line Panel which shows the lines that belong to this queue. This allows the calltaker to bypass the queue process to answer a particular line; the calltaker may determine that it is necessary to do this based on the ALI-Before-Answer information in the Call Lists Module (Active Calls List). Example of a queue button programmed to access 9-1-1 calls Line-in-use Indicator Hold Indicator Call Counter Trunk Group Call Timer Trunk Call Presentation Indicators The flashing red indicators signify an incoming call. Call Counter Indicates the number of calls in the specified trunk group waiting to be answered. The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is olTered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POSITRON It may not be disclosed 10 third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe eounty, FL Page 66 of 89 July 16, 2002 Hold Indicator Indicates whether one or more calls have been placed on hold. When you place a call on hold, the indicator turns green and an I appears (at the top, right corner of the queue button) to indicate an IHOLD status. When a call is placed on hold by another operator, the indicator turns red and an H appears to indicate a HOLD status. The IHOLD and HOLD statuses also appear in tbe Active Calls list. Trunk Group Indicates the trunk group that is assigned to the queue button. Call Timer Indicates how long the longest ringing call has gone unanswered (if you are not on a call in that queue). When on a call in that queue, the call timer indicates the time you have been on line with the caller. Line-in-use Indicator The green indicator signifies that you are on a call in that queue. Trunk Identifies the line that is in use. S.2a ALl/ANI Identification Automatic ANY ALl information access is an essential requirement of any 9-1-1 systern, computer based or otherwise. An Intelligent Workstation should be able to offer a great deal of flexibility handling this data. For example, while the incoming ANI and ALl information resides permanently in the database the information should be presented to the call-taker in a data entry mode. This allows the call-takers to modify the information without affecting the original ANY ALl data. ANY ALl data shall be shared with all other positions. Manual requests of ALl shall be available for a call-taker-entered ANI. There shall be a means of disabling Manual database requests if required by law. In addition, ALl Before Answer shall be provided, whereby ALl is displayed for all E9-1-1 calls ringing in at the PSAP. The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the pU'l'ose of evaluation. II POSITRON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe County, FL Page 67 of89 July 16, 2002 Positron Response: Comply The Power 911 IWS provides a Location Module which provides the following panels: ALl Panel ANI/ALl for the call are stored within Power 911's internal SQL database exactly as received from the ALl Database. The ALl panel displays this information but will not allow the calltaker to change it. The ALl Panel also allows the calltaker to tag an ALl as incorrect. A report of incorrect ALIs can be generated via Power MIS and sent to the database provider for investigation. Should the ALl be incomplete or corrupted, the calltaker can request a retransmission from the ALl database using the RTX button. The DBR button opens the Database Request panel. This allows the calltaker to perform an ALl Database lookup for a manually entered number. The Print button will send to a network printer selected information from the ALl, Incident Location (described below), Caller Information (described below) and TDD conversations. Customizable Rich- Text-Format (RTF) based templates allows PSAP personnel to configure what information gets printed. ALl Panel The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is otTered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POSITRON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe eounty, FL Page 68 of 89 July 16, 2002 Incident Location Panel Calling Party Panel (requires Incident Detailing) This panel initially contains the same ANI! ALl information as the ALl Panel. On creation of an incident it becomes available and allows the calltaker to edit the ALl to reflect the location where the incident is occurring, which for example may be down the street instead of at the caller's location. Buttons allow the calltaker to copy information from another panel to the currently displayed panel. (requires Incident Detailing) This panel operates in the same manner as the Incident Location Panel, except that it is meant to identify the caller if the caller is not the person identified in the ALl record. It also allows the calltaker to cycle through the Calling Party information gathered on other calls reporting the same incident (these may have been answered at other answering positions ). Calling Party Panel (Incident Location Panel similar) ,AQ ESHl5DD -Area_5. .:!J . Real-Time Sharin2 of Information It is important to note that the information in the ALl, Incident Location, and Calling Party panels can be shared in real-time among all calltakers once an incident is created. The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is ofTered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POSITRON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe County, FL Page 69 of 89 July 16, 2002 S.2b Caller ID on Administrative Lines The ealler ill of calls received over administrative lines shall be displayed on-screen. The proposed system must be equipped to handle ealler ill for 25 Administrative Lines. I Positron Response: Comply S.2c Call Transfer Functions The Intelligent Workstation shall be configurable to perform transfers using the following (mutually exclusive) methods: Transfer destination determined by programming in the CO. In other words, the pre-determined tandem transfer code for (as an example) "Fire" is sent to the eo, which then routes the call to the appropriate Fire Department. From the call-taker's perspective, he or she simply presses the "Fire" transfer button, and the call is transferred to the appropriate agency. Transfer destination determined by the Intelligent Workstation. In other words, the Intelligent Workstation dynamically sets the "recommended" transfer destination based on the ESN in the ALl data, as dials the appropriate number via the tandem transfer mechanisrn. Frorn the call-taker's perspective, he or she simply presses the "Fire" button, and the call is transferred to the appropriate agency. The label on the "Fire" transfer button will change to reflect the particular agency selected by the system (i.e. "Fire - [Agency Name]"). Whichever rnethod is configured, the call-taker shall be able to override the default destination by selecting an alternate from a list of destinations. Any given transfer destination button shall be programmable with one or more numbers used to reach the corresponding agency. It shall be possible to define the time of day for which each of the numbers is valid. The tirne spans that different numbers are valid can overlap, therefore if a number is busy, the Intelligent Workstation shall automatically cycle through the other currently valid numbers as the transfer button is pressed. Positron Response: Comply The Contact module contains 10 contact buttons. Each Contact button can transfer voice and/or data to a primary or a secondary response agency. The SEND button will send initiate a data transfer to all selected agencies simultaneously. The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is olTered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POSIT RON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe County, FL Page 70 of 89 July 16, 2002 Contact Module Right-clicking any of these buttons provides access to an Extended Contact panel which contains an additional 128 contact buttons, for a total of 1280 contact destinations. The extended Contact Panel is shown below. Extended Contact Panel The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is otTered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POSITRON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe eounty, FL - , -.r Page 71 of 89 July 16, 2002 Contact Button Voice Transfer Indicators Data Transfer Indicator Agency Type Agency Destination Button ID Primary Assignment Button Agency Type Agency Destination Button ID Primary Assignment Button Secondary Assignment Button V oice Transfer Indicators Flashing Red and Green Steady Red and Green Data Transfer Indicator Secondary Assignment Button Identifies the agency type assigned to the contact button. Names the location of the agency type. Identifies the placement of the contact button in the Contact module or the Extended Contact panel. Indicates that an agency is assigned to be a primary response agency. (A primary response agency is the one that arrives first and is best-suited to handle the emergency.) Indicates that an agency is assigned to be a secondary response agency. (A secondary response agency can assist the primary response agency with the handling of the emergency.) Indicates the status of voice transfers, as follows: Voice Transfer In Progress. V oice Transfer Successful. Indicates the status of data transfers, as follows: Unlit The agency does not have data transfer capability or data has been transferred within an agency (internally), The data has been successfully sent. The data has not yet been sent or has been modified after having performed a data transfer. Green Yellow Flashing Yellow Red Flashing Red The data transfer is in progress. The agency cannot be contacted. High possibility of transfer failure. The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POS I T RON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe County, FL Page 72 of 89 July 16, 2002 Automatic Transfer Selection based on ESN Power 911 IWS can be configured to recommend which particular agencies appear in the Contact Module's main 10-button window, based on the ESN from the ALl data stream. (The other method is to just configure for example a POLICE button, a FIRE button, an EMS button, with the appropriate tandem transfer codes and let the Tandem route the calls to the appropriate agencies). Automatic Primarv/Secondarv Recommendations Based on Incident Information The Primary and Secondary (i.e. P and S) buttons on a Contact Button are optional and can be hidden. They determine which agency type should be contacted first. Power 911 IWS can be configured to recommend which agency type should be the Primary based on the Incident Type identified in the Incident Detailing Module (part of the optional Incident Manager module). For example, if handling an Incident of type CAR ACCIDENT, the system can recommend EMS as the Primary responder which should be contacted first. The system can also be configured to CHANGE this Primary/Secondary recommendation based on a Yes/No answer to a particular Incident Detailing Question, for example, in our I CAR ACCIDENT scenario, ifthe answer to the incident Question: "Are there any injuries?" is "NO", then the system will CHANGE the recommended Primary of EMS to POLICE or FIRE or whatever the PSAP's procedures dictate. Intelli2ent Handlin2 of ContactJTransfer Destinations Power 911 IWS intelligently handles how the contact buttons initiate calls and transfers. For example, if a particular button is configured for "County Fire", what happens when it is clicked on will depend on the context. If a calltaker is talking to a 9-1-1 caller, pressing the contact button will establish a voice transfer via the tandem. If on the other hand the calltaker is not on a call at all, clicking the contact button will cause the system to automatically select an available outgoing line, and dial the full PSTN number to reach "County Fire". The system also allows multiple phone numbers to be programmed for a given destination. Each of these numbers can even be restricted to particular times of day, so that one number would automatically be used during the day, and another at night. Many numbers and corresponding time ranges can be assigned per agency, and their time ranges can overlap. The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II pos ITRON [t may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe County, FL Page 73 of 89 July 16, 2002 S.2d Data Transfer Function The system shall have the ability to transfer ALl Data to multiple destinations via a single key-press (On-Screen "Send" button and/or keyboard activation). The basic requirement is for ALl transfer to remote serial printer via dial-up connection. Propose as an OPTION an enhanced data transfer capability whereby ALl, and other data gathered by the call-taker can be transferred via dial-up connection to remote Fax machines. Positron Response: Comply The Power 911 IWS can initiate Data Transfers either via the Life Line 100 ANI! ALl Controller's Remote Data Transfer feature (i.e. ANI/ALl Data to either a dial-up or dedicated remote serial printer), or via an optional Communications Server which would then allow a wider range of Data to be transferred via various means (Printers, E-Mail, Remote Fax Machines). The types of information that can be shared via a Communications Server are varied, and each transfer destination can receive its own grouping of data elements. Power 911 achieves this using Templates. The Templates are simple RTF (Rich Text Format) files which allow the individual pieces of data to be laid out as appropriate on the page. For any of the following pieces of information that can be included in the output, simply place its "placeholder" text string on the page where it needs to appear, along with any desired formatting (Bold, Italics, etc.): Incident Text Strin2s INCNUM INCTYPE INCHISTTYPE INCMOD Incident number, Incident type. History of changes to the incident type, if it was changed. Indication that changes have been made to the incident information, if incident information has been changed since it was last sent to the same agency. Priority of the incident. Incident priorities, if they changed. Incident location. List of calling parties who reported the incident. Current status of the incident. Primary agency that is treating the incident. Secondary agencies that are treating the incident. Incident questions, where n equals questions 1 to 9. Answers to incident questions, where n equals questions 1 to 9. INCPRI INCHISPRI INCILI INCCPI INCSTA INCPRIINV INCSECINV INCQUEn INCANSn The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POSITRON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe County, FL Page 74 of 89 July 16,2002 Call Text Strin2s CALLANI CALLALI CALLSTA CALLHISST A CALLPRIINV CALLSECINV Call's ANI. Call's ALl. Call's status. Call history status. Primary agency that is treating the call. Secondary agencies that are treating the call. 5.3 Integrated TDD The Intelligent Workstation shall provide integrated on-screen TDD for all lines. The device should handle both Baudot and ASCII protocols. The system shall allow the call-taker to communicate freely by using the keyboard and/or selection ofpre-prograrnmed messages. The system shall buffer the keystrokes that a calltaker types in the TDD module. This will give the calltaker the option to: · Send the entire message only once the entire sentence is typed, OR · Send each keystroke as it is typed. This will be used in situations where a TDD caller tends to start responding to a message before it is completed, sometimes before understanding the true nature of the message. It shall be possible to switch between buffered and non-buffered mode on the fly. Each answering position shall be equipped with its own TDD processing hardware. Systems which employ a central piece of equipment for TDD processing will not be considered due to single point of failure considerations. Positron Response: Comply Power 911's Integrated on-screen TDD allows call takers to communicate with hearing and/or speech-impaired callers. This functionality handles both ASCII and Baudot Communication protocols, automatically identifying TDD calls using the Baudot protocol. When an incoming TDD call using the Baudot communication protocol is received, the Baudot tones automatically activate the TDD panel. Upon detection of the Baudot tone, automatic muting is activated. The mute is full on the transmit (mouthpiece) side and partial on the (attenuation of 20dB) on the receive side. When an incoming TDD call using the ASCII communication protocol is received, the call taker will hear the carrier detection frequency. The calltaker can then click the TDD button to access the TDD panel and click the ASCII button to establish communications with the caller. The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POS I T RON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe eounty, FL Page 75 of 89 July 16,2002 Both keyboard interaction and pre-programmed messages are supported. The pre- programmed messages are provided in two ways: First, a basic set of messages which are always available, and secondly an additional dynamic set of messages which change depending on the incident type being handled (this second set requires the optional Incident Detailing Module). Also, the standard NENA recommended messages are pre-programmed when shipped from the factory in multiple languages. A button on the TDD Panel allows printing of the conversation to a network printer. A "Buffered" mode is also available. When turned off, keystrokes (and pre-programmed messages) are sent as they occur. When turned on, the messages are buffered so that they are only sent when the calltaker hits the <ENTER> key. The key benefit of this is that callers will only be delivered a complete message all at once, reducing the chance that they'll anticipate the question and start responding (often off-topic) before the entire meaning of the question or message in understood. The following figure shows the Power 911 Integrated TDD Panel. The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is otTered solely for the purpose or evaluation. II POSITRON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp, Monroe County, FL Page 76 of 89 July 16, 2002 5.4 Digitized Voice / Integrated Voice Recording In addition to standard contacts for external call recorders, the Intelligent Workstation shall have a built-in and integrated call recorder as per the following definitions: Built-in - The call recording functionality shall be accessible on-screen via the Intelligent Workstation's GUI (Graphical User Interface). Integrated - Individual recordings shall be accessible via their associated on-screen call records. In other words, the relationship between a given call event, the ALl and associated audio recording is clearly displayed. Audio Recordings shall be stored in W A V format, and purged after a configurable delay in order to conserve hard drive space. It shall be possible to save (and un-save) individual call recordings to prevent purging of the file. In addition, the system should have the ability to record personalized greeting announcements, i.e., "9-1-1 What is your emergency?" Positron Response: Comply The integrated recorder provides many advantages over an external call recording device: The Power 911 model is integrated into the Intelligent Workstation. There is therefore one less piece of equipment to take up space on the answering position desktop. The Power 911 model can be set to record either automatically, or on demand via manual on- screen controls. The Power 911 model records each call as a distinct standard Windows NT W A V file. The Power 911 model allows a calltaker to select a previous call from the list of calls he or she has handled and playback the recording if still available (recordings are purged from the system over time to conserve disk space, with the exception of recordings that have been tagged by the calltaker as "saved"). The length of time call recordings are kept (and therefore available for playback) after termination of the call is configurable. Once that time has elapsed, the system automatically purges the recording to conserve disk space. A calltaker can prevent a call recording from being purged by pressing the SA VEIUNSA VE button. When the recording is no longer needed, pressing SA VEIUNSA VE a second time will allow the recording to eventually be purged. There is no limit to how long a recording can be "saved", although how many calls (and of what length) can remain "saved" is limited by the hard drive space available. Power 911 will also continue to record a conversation for as long as it lasts, well beyond the typical 15-30 minutes of an external position recorder. The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POS I T RON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe County, FL Page 77 of 89 July 16,2002 Recording controls (Record, Play, Stop, SavelUnsave) can be included as buttons on the feature panel (as shown below). 5.5 Call Lists The Intelligent Workstation shall provide an on-screen view ofPSAP-wide call activity, providing call status (RINGING, TALK, HOLD, etc...) as well as associated ALl (even before-answer for call still ringing into the PSAP). Multiple lists will be provided, showing different groupings of call events, for example "All Active Calls", "All Abandoned Calls", "All Previous Calls from this ANI", "All Calls previously handled by this ealltaker", etc... It shall be possible to barge into an active call by selecting it from the Active Calls list. It shall also be possible to re-dial an abandoned call or other previous calls by selecting from the appropriate eall List. A Query feature shall allow call records to be filtered and searched on the fly. When used in conjunction with the OPTIONAL Incident Management feature, Incident-related listed shall also be provided. Positron Response: Comply The Power 911 Lists module organizes call and incident information into a series of up to six lists. Three groupings (or "modes") of these lists are available in this module: call taker, dispatcher, and supervisor. The lists are configurable on a per agent basis. Therefore, the number and the order in which they appear for each view may differ for each agent or group of agents. The Lists module manages information so that you are made aware of new information concerning a call, and are alerted to any changes in the status of a call or incident that is being handled. When information concerning a particular emergency becomes available, Power 911 places this information into the appropriate list so you can access and view it. You are alerted to new information when the indicator, located above the list name, turns yellow. For example, as soon as a new call is detected by the system, a call record is added to the Active Calls list and the Active Calls indicator turns yellow. The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POSITRON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp, Monroe County, FL Page 78 of 89 July 16, 2002 The lists in the Lists module are defined as follows: Abandoned Calls Lists the records of calls that have been abandoned before being answered by an operator. Operators use this list to keep track of abandoned calls. The operator can select an abandoned call from this list, and use the redial button to contact that caller. Active Calls Lists the records of calls from the moment that they are detected as incoming or outgoing until they are released by the operator. The operator uses this list to keep track of these calls and monitor their current status. History Calls Lists the records of calls with the same ANI as the current call. The operator uses this list to verify the presence of previous calls made by the current caller. History Incidents Lists the records of incidents with the same ANI as the current call. The operator uses this list to verify the presence of previous incidents reported by the current caller. Entry Incidents Lists the records of incidents from the moment they are created until a dispatch is requested, or the incidents are canceled or closed. The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is olTered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II pos ITRON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe County, FL Page 79 of 89 July 16, 2002 Duplicate Incidents Lists the records of active incidents with the same ESN and same or similar incident type as the current call. Incidents are considered duplicate when the ESN is the same and the incident type is the same or similar. The operator uses this list to identify potential duplicate incidents and link them. Pending Incidents Lists the records of incidents that have been assigned the Request for Dispatch status and await unit dispatch. The operator uses this list to identify incidents that require unit dispatch. Active Incidents Lists the records of incidents from the moment that a Dispatch status is assigned to incidents until they are closed. The operator uses this list to track the incidents to which emergency units have been assigned. Agent Calls Lists the records of calls that have been released by the operator. Agent Incidents Lists the records of incidents that have been closed by the operator. Call Query Lists the records of calls that have been queried from the database. The operator uses this list to generate a filtered view of call records by specifying filtering criteria. Incident Query Lists the records of incidents that have been queried from the database. The operator uses this list to generate a filtered view of incident records by specifying filtering criteria. This is further described below under the "Performing Call and Incident Queries". Performine Call and Incident Oueries Two types of queries can be performed: call queries or incident (if optional Incident Manager module is purchased) queries. The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POSITRON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe County, FL Page 80 of 89 July 16,2002 For example, a query can be made to generate a list of all the calls that were answered by a specific call taker on a specific day. Call and incident queries are performed by clicking either the Call Query or the Incident Query tab, specifying the filtering criteria in the Record Query module, and then clicking the Search button. The results of call or incident queries, which are displayed in the Lists module, can be printed. Searches can be based on one or a combination of the following filtering criteria: Date Telephone number Time ID (incident record number) Incident type User ID Trunk number The wildcard for Power 911 queries is an asterisk (*). It can be used in the Tel and ID fields of the Record Query module. Query progress and invalid entries for queries are indicated on the Status bar located at the bottom of the Power 911 screen. The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POSITRON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe County, FL Page 81 of 89 July 16, 2002 5.6 Message Board The Intelligent Workstation shall provide an on-screen message board which is always on-line. This shall allow the broadcast of a textual message to each call-taker or a select group of call-takers in the PSAP without interrupting the call-taker activity. The system shall also allow the recipient call- takers to acknowledge that a message was read. This feature shall be unobtrusive in that it shall never cover up another feature of the workstation and shall always be available. Pre-programmed messages shall be available for commonly used messages (such as "Weather warning in effect- Heavy Rain") and keyboard entry for one-of-a-kind messages. Positron Response: Comply The Message Board Module allows messages to be sent to all operators, a selected group of operators, or a specific operator currently logged on to the system. The operator is alerted to the presence of incoming messages non-intrusively so that they can be made aware of important information without interfering with any calls currently being handled. Both visual and audible indication are provided. Messages will be displayed visually, labeled as either "Normal" or "Urgent". Normal messages are also indicated by an audible beep every 5 seconds, Urgent messages by two beeps every 5 seconds. Upon reception of a message, the following will be indicated: . Time the message was sent. . Name of the sender and the number of their workstation. . N umber of unread messages. . Priority of the first message received (normal or urgent). Any recipient of a message can acknowledge having read the message simply by pressing the "Ack" button. This can be used not only for messages sent by a supervisor, but from other operators as well. When a message has incident information attached to it, a paper icon appears. Clicking this icon populates the Incident Detail and Location modules with the attached Incident Information. Message Board Module , f;,R'~1d<"~'" '"rr,dd' >"':ll'~"L ," "~" , "'~'-'-' ~~ ~ 1 ~;jo \ , .. Ci ',< ~~ ~ f~ _~.;I> ~.. -, '" ,;', ,- ;'7'~'r" - 'lI...~'~'L~1!i~1'!'~.liili'fi..&\! "ft' ,,' ...,J.. M'; , ;,,'C _1IIJ!:~tomlu>>8I' ~<<::II& I ' , f.-<< ~ ~ ""'" ;:""",;:;:h;."_"',,,"'''''''=.m ...._,.,~~....,..~ "'-"" ,.,"",.__~ "" '"'-"'" "",_.~N' ~,. _."" -- ~ ~ "~ l ,~ ~ ~= ~~'fl ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ _ The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POSITRON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe County, FL Page 82 of 89 July 16, 2002 The Extended Message panel (shown immediately below) is accessed via the"..." button to view longer messages that cannot be completely displayed in the Message Board Module. Sendin!! a Messa!!e The Compose Message Panel is where messages are created. There are thee ways of generating a message: · Type a message in the message entry area, · Click one of the six pre-configured Broadcast buttons, or · Select a predefined message from the drop-down list of Broadcast Messages. The sender can also specify who the message will be sent to, whether it is urgent, and whether Incident information should be sent along as well. Each Broadcast button can be pre-configured with a message, a priority (normal or urgent), the option of attaching incident information, and the name of the recipient or group of recipients. These buttons can also be configured to send the message either immediately, or after also clicking the SEND button (this second approach allows the pre-programmed message to be edited before sending). The list of Broadcast Messages ( a drop-down list) offers additional pre-programmed messages that can also be edited before sending. The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II pos IT RON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe eounty, FL Page 83 of 89 July 16,2002 List of Broadcast Messages Message Entry Area Broadcast Buttons 5.7 System Toolbar The Intelligent Workstation shall provide the ability to program buttons to allow for "point & click" access to frequently used features and commands such as, print on demand, fast coding of incident (if Incident Manager OPTION is irnplemented) and third-party application launch. Positron Response: Comply The Power 911 Intelligent Workstation provides the ability to program buttons to allow for "point & click" access to frequently used features and commands such as fast coding of incident, deferred dispatch, and print on demand. This is provided by the Power 911 System Toolbar. In addition to the above, these buttons can also be configured to launch other Windows NT executables (i.e. other Positron software applications, Windows NT tools/applications, or third-party software applications that have been tested and approved by Positron for concurrent use on the Power 911 Intelligent Workstation). Each button's Icon can be customized via standard bitmaps. Power 911 System Toolbar The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POSITRON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe County, FL Page 84 of 89 July 16, 2002 5.8 Incident Management As part of an Incident Management OPTION, the Intelligent Workstation shall allow the call-taker to select a designated incident type, such as fire, auto accident, B & E, after the initial response from the caller. The system shall present the call-taker key questions relative to the emergency at hand. Priority questions should be highlighted to prompt the call-taker to get the rnost important information first. The information should be automatically stored in the system's database and be available to all other call-takers. The incident types should be configurable by the PSAP. The system should also be programmable to recommend primary transfer destination based on the type of incident. The call-taker should also have the ability to send different types of information, such as ANVALI, additional location data, or even a script of the incident's questions and answers to remote printers or faxes via the Enhanced Data transfer OPTION. Enhancement of TDD functionality: When the Incident Management OPTION is used, the list of pre-programmed TDD messages shall be automatically supplemented with additional pre- programmed messages that pertain to the selected incident type. For example, if the call-taker selects "domestic Fire" as an incident type, the pre-programmed TDD messages will then also include "Is anyone still in the building? GA". Multiple-Language Support: The Intelligent Workstation shall allow the call-taker the ability to change the language of the questions presented to them in the Incident Detailing section of the screen. This shall affect both the questions shown here and the pre-programmed TDD messages associated with each question. Premise Information Database: The Intelligent Workstation shall support a local database that provides the call-taker with immediate access to stored information about a specific location. This information could include building access, hazard warnings, hazardous rnaterial information, structural plans, evacuation instructions, site photos. The system should not force a call-taker to read through extensive information in order to find the required information, it should autornatically search for existing information based on the ANI of the call, and indicate to the call-taker that there is data available for review. Premise Data will be entered by the PSAP. Standard Operating Procedures Database: The Intelligent Workstation shall provide the software tools to allow for the creation and viewing of an SOP (Standard Operating Procedures) database. This will assure procedures are applied in a uniform and consistent manner, in addition to providing training functionality. Based on the type of incident entered, the system shall prompt the call-taker that procedures exist. In addition procedures shall be displayed in hypertext format, allowing call-takers to move quickly through the information to access key procedures quickly. SOP data will be entered by the PSAP. The systern shall also allow the importing of third party SOPs, such as APeO's. The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POSITRON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe County, FL Page 85 of 89 July 16,2002 Positron Response: Comply Power 911's Incident Manager module offers the capabilities described in the following paragraphs. Incident DetailiDl! The Power 911 Incident Detailing module provides a drop-down list from which the calltaker selects the type of incident being handled (the list of types is completely configurable). I Upon selection of a particular type, for example "Car Accident", this module automatically prompts the calltaker with questions specific to that incident type (these are displayed on the Incident Question Buttons). Ordering or underlining of the questions can be used to highlight which should be asked first. When the calltaker presses a button corresponding to a question, the question appears in the Incident Response Area. The calltaker then types the caller's answer. An indicator on each Question Button lights up to show it's been answered. When the calltaker moves on to the next question, the previous question and associated answer appear together in the Broadcast Window, with a time stamp indicating the time the response was entered, as well as the login ID (name) of the calltaker that entered the information. This is important as Power 911 allows incidents to be linked together if a calltaker determines that they are handling the same incident that was reported to another calltaker (by a previous caller). The linking causes the corresponding questions and answers to be merged together, while still showing associated time/user stamps. This is a powerful and easy way to piece together a more complete picture of a particular incident. (Incident linked in error are easily unlinked). The incident type selected can automatically change the Standard Operating Procedure displayed in the SOP Module to the procedure for this specific incident type. The incident type selected can also change the system recommendation for transfer (this appears in the Transfers Module). For example, for a "Car Accident", the system may recommend EMS be contacted first. The system can also change the recommendation based on a Yes/No answer to particular questions. In our example, suppose the answer typed in by the calltaker was "No" to the question "Are there any injuries?", the system could be configured to change the recommendation to contacting Police first instead of EMS. Also, the standard (i.e. basic set of) pre-programmed TDD questions can be automatically supplemented with incident type specific questions based on the type selected. The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POSITRON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe County, FL Page 86 of 89 July 16, 2002 Power 911 Incident Detailing Module Incident Question Buttons CT-l11:17:25> Corner of St.Lauentand StUrbain. Is there a gas spill? Broadcast Window CT.l11:17:32> No re there presently any vehicles at the scene of accident? 3 Incident Response Area Multi-Lan2ua2e Support The Power911 Intelligent Workstation (IWS) is designed to work in a multilingual environment. It offers three levels of flexibility with regards to the language selection. . Site Language Positron systems are currently operational in Europe and South America working in various languages. · User Profile-based Language · Based on the user login profile, different languages can be used within the same center by different call-takers. The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is olfered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POSITRON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe eounty, FL Page 87 of 89 July 16, 2002 · Interpreter Key Language Selecting an alternate language changes the language used for incident detailing questions, as well as pre-programmed TDD messages. This makes it easier to deal with callers whose first language isn't English, for example in the case of a Spanish-speaking caller, a calltaker who may be proficient in Spanish will find it even easier to converse with the caller, as they would not have to mentally translate the questions on the fly (the Interpreter Key does this for them simply by selecting Spanish (SPA) from the drop-down list). We recommend that I answers be typed in by the calltaker in the language commonly used in the PSAP (a.k.a. the I "Site Language", most commonly English) so that other calltakers (which my not speak Spanish) be able to read the incident information. CT -111 :20:16> No re there presently any vehicles at the scene of accident? CT-111:20:18> 3 re you presently blocking traffic? Premise Information The information within the Premise Information Module is presented based on the ANI of the call. Should Premise Information be available for the current ANI, the indicator above the Premise button will automatically light up Yellow. The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is otTered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POSITRON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe eounty, FL Page 88 of 89 July 16,2002 Because we've integrated Microsoft's Internet Explorer within Power 911 IWS, calltakers can access a wide range of data types with single-click access within a familiar web browser environment. Many different forms of data (such as plain text, formatted text, static bitmap images, dynamic images, even A VI video) are supported, and any of these can be a hyperlink to another online document (clicking on a hyperlink brings you to that particular document). Content is easy to create and maintain using off-the shelf third-party applications ranging from simple text editors to what-you-see-is-what-you-get HTML editors such as Microsoft FrontPage. Premise Information Module Available categories are: . Building Access . Hazard Wamings . Evacuation Instructions Standard Operatin2 Procedures The SOP Module within Power 911 allows for the creation and viewing of a Standard Operating Procedures (SOP) database. The system uses the Microsoft Internet Explorer engine to display HTML-based operating procedures based on the type of incident being handled. Procedures are displayed in hypertext format, allowing call-takers to move quickly through procedures. SOP information is easily entered and maintained using off-the shelf standard applications ranging from simple text editors (such as WordPad, built into Windows NT) to what-you-see- is-what-you-get HTML editors such as Microsoft FrontPage, The infonnation contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POS I T RON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. Positron Public Safety Systems Corp. Monroe County, FL Page 89 of 89 July 16,2002 Please note also that Positron, in alliance with PowerPhone, has developed an on-line version of PowerPhone's Standard Operating Procedures guide books, which can be viewed in HTML format using the same point-and-click ease. This provides PSAPs with a fully developed industry standard SOP supported by Power 911. The information contained in this proposal is proprietary to Positron and is offered solely for the purpose of evaluation. II POSITRON It may not be disclosed to third parties without prior written permission from Positron. "_,_~""___,_",,,,,~.,~,.,_"_'~'_"ili_'_"~._~___" MARSH An MMC Company No.: L-01-37 Dated: Aug. 29, 2002 This document supersedes any certificate previously issued under this number This is to certify that the policies of insurance described herein have been issued to the Insured named herein for the policy period indicated. Notwithstanding any requirement, term or condition of any contract or other document with respect to which the Certificate may be issued or may pertain, the insurance afforded by the policies described herein is subject to all the terms, conditions and exclusions of such policies. Limits shown may have been reduced by paid claims. This Certificate is issued as a matter of information only and confers no rights upon the Certificate Holder other than those provided by this policy. This Certificate does not amend, extend or alter the coverage afforded by the policies described herein. , ~'~M._,.~'~~''"''~''_'~~ ^'^"',"N~-".-.-.-.-.'..~~'M'^'^ Certificate of Insurance Name and address of Insured: POSITRON INC.lPOSITRON INDUSTRIES INC.lPOSITRON PUBLIC SAFETY SYSTEMS CORP. 5101 Buchan Street Montreal, Quebec H4P 2R9 Certificate issued to: THE MONROE COUNTY BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS Florida Type(s) of Insurance Comprehensive General Liability Insurer( s) Chubb Insurance Company of Canada Policy No(s). 3532-54-54 Workers' Compensation Chubb Insurance Company of Canada IB-05161 Effective/ Expiry Dates Oct. 31,2001 to Oct. 31, 2002 Coveraee Inclusive Limits Bodily Injury and Property Damage. Limit(s) of Liabilitv $ 1,000,000 each occurrence or accident $ 1,000,000 aggregate, Products and Completed Operations $100,000. each accident $100,000. disease- each employee $500,000. disease - policy limit March 12,2002 Employers Liability. to March 12,2003 SDecial conditions: Comprehensive General Liability includes: Owned, Non-Owned and Hired Vehicles: $1,000,000 limit Premises Operations Blanket Contractual Liability Personal Injury Liability Expanded Definition of Property Damage THE MONROE COUNTY BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS is added as Additional Insured but only with respect to the operations performed by the Named Insured. Notice of Cancellation Should any of the policies described herein be cancelled before the expiration date thereof, the Insurer affording coverage will endeavor to mail 30 days written notice to the Certificate Holder named herein, but failure to mail such notice shall impose no obligation or liability of any kind upon the Insurer affording coverage, its agents or representatives. Marsh Canada Limited 2200 McGill College Avenue, Suite 300 Montreal, Quebec IDA 3P8 Telephone 514 285 4700 AP BY DATE WAIVER N/A~YES