http://militias.ning.com/profiles/blogs/former-state-trooper-evenson
FORMER STATE TROOPER EVENSON WARNS OF ROADBLOCK PLANS
Kansas State Trooper Greg Evenson telling us that he's been contacted by active duty State trooper friends from several states who are all telling him of plans to erect roadblocks at key places along interstate highways to force all cars to go single file up to barricades where you will be given a "choice":
be vaccinated on the spot and fitted with a stainless steel wrist bracelet containing an RFID chip with your medical history showing you've received the vaccine, or be put on a bus and taken to a FEMA Quarantine Camp.
If you don't receive the vaccine and RFID bracelet, you will be blocked from entering your place of business, supermarkets, you'll be blocked from flying, police are being set up to be the new SS, and many aren't liking it at all.
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Have you been made aware of the massive roadblock plans to stop all travelers for a vaccine bracelet (stainless steel band with a micro-chip on board) that will force you to take the shot? Refuse it? You will be placed on a prison bus and taken to a quarantine camp. What will you do when your children are NOT allowed into school without the shot? What will you do when you are not allowed into the workplace without the vaccine paperwork? Buy groceries? Go to the bank? Shop anywhere?? Get on a plane, bus or train? Use the toilet in the mall? Nope. Police officers will become loathed, feared, despised and remembered for their “official” duties.
“We didn’t look at it specifically from a technical point of view. Technology had to link with our operation, not the other way around. The requirement had to drive the technology,” says Chief Colley.
[link to www.motorola.com]
Solution: Texas Evacuation Tracking System (TX SNETS)
In response to the recommendations of a state-appointed special task force,
the Governor’s Division of Emergency Management (GDEM) reached out to the
private sector. An AT&T-led group of technology providers including Motorola,
Radiant RFID and Retriever Software, worked together to create an automated
evacuee tracking system.Called TX SNETS, the system integrates Motorola handheld computers with
Geographic Information System (GIS) databases with status and tracking
displays, tracking software, barcode wristbands and Radio Frequency
Identification (RFID) scanners, and commercial coaches and school buses
equipped with mobile Global Positioning System (GPS) units.
Results: Simple process that registers 12,000 evacuees and pets per hour
Wristbands are scanned as evacuees board GPS-equipped buses and again
upon arrival at the sheltering destination, updating the information at each point
and sending the data wirelessly to a centralized database maintained by the
University of Texas Center for Space Research. The TX SNETS solution allows the
state to monitor the evacuees’ status, keep family members and pets together,
and provide information to loved ones at each stage in the evacuation process.
The MOTOROLA MC9094 provides emergency personnel with true mobility, enabling them to register evacuees on-site.
Improving the evacuation process through
integrated technology
When Hurricane Katrina hit the southern coast of the
United States, approximately 475,000 evacuees fled
to Texas. More than 126,000 had no identification,
9,000 were special needs individuals, and 2,000
children under eighteen were unaccompanied by
an adult. “It was a major relief operation,” recalls
Chief Jack Colley, Governor’s Division of Emergency
Management (GDEM).
The GDEM invited Motorola and other private sector
technology providers to develop an effective, secure
solution that would help the state evacuate and
track special needs individuals quickly, efficiently and
safely. With special needs redefined as anyone who
could not self-evacuate for any reason, the numbers
of potential evacuees increased dramatically, adding
layers of complexity to the challenge. A rapid
registration process and a secure method of tracking
each evacuee, as well as their pets, wheelchairs,
walkers, and other necessities, throughout the entire
evacuation process was critical.
Motorola partnered with Retriever Software and
Radiant RFID to create an integrated technology
solution using Radiant RFID’s customized bar-coded
RFID wristbands and RFID portals, Retriever’s
tracking application software, and Motorola’s rugged
MC9094 handheld computers.“We worked with about 58 private groups to make
this system happen and those groups were essential
to developing answers that work in the real world,”
Chief Colley says. “For example, Motorola gives us
great support from border security to evacuations.
They are there when we need them most. We’re
dealing with life and death, not proficiency issues, so
the technology has to work, it cannot fail.”
Smooth efficient registration process
The process is simple. Upon arrival at a designated
evacuation center, National Guardsmen collect and
enter each family’s information into the tracking
system using a laptop computer or a MC9094
handheld wireless computer. A rugged device
designed for the most demanding, high stress field
environment, the MC9094 provides emergency
personnel with true mobility, enabling them to
register evacuees on-site at the evacuation hub.
Data input errors are reduced by a user-friendly
software application with a standard template. And
the rapid deployment of over 500 handheld mobile
computers meant that the equipment would be
there when it was needed.
“The contributions made by the Motorola team were
nothing less than spectacular,” says Cynthia Rubio,
president of Radiant RFID. “Product knowledge,
responsiveness and perseverance were huge factors
that contributed to the successful deployment of this
system.”
Keeping family and pets together and loved ones
informed
After the data is collected, each family member
is given an RFID wristband with a serial number
that matches the record in the database. Pets
and physical or medical equipment are given
corresponding tags. The information is wirelessly
transmitted to the master database housed at the
University of Texas Center for Space Research in
Austin.
“The scale of mass evacuation demands a new
approach to command control and the creation of a
system that registers evacuees in real-time at their
departure points,” says Dr. Gordon Wells, Program
Manager, Center for Space Research, University of
Texas at Austin. “One of our jobs (at the Center) is to
track the location, capacity and current occupancy of
the evacuation shelters. So tracking the location of
the evacuees as they move through the process and
monitoring bus locations through GPS technology
was a natural activity we could expand on.”
Tracking enabled by wireless devices
National Guardsmen also use the Motorola handheld
computers to scan the wristbands as evacuees
board buses for transport to the shelters. Before
departure, the Guardsmen print out a manifest for
the driver to help account for each evacuee after
fuel stops and comfort station breaks. Buses are
equipped with GPS units, enabling the Center for
Space Research to track and report their locations
and speeds every 30 seconds.
Upon arrival at the shelter, evacuees either walk
through an RFID portal or their wristbands are
manually scanned, updating their status and
transmitting the information to the master database.
A printed manifest is then provided to the shelter
host. TX SNETS keeps evacuees, their pets, and
their medical necessities together and allows family
members to contact the Texas 2-1-1 information and
referral service to track evacuees’ status and current
location.
By the time Hurricane Dean threatened the Texas coast in August of 2007, the state was ready and waiting
with TX SNETS securely in place and poised to evacuate 150,000 people on 3,000 buses.
“When you’re dealing with people, not just assets, there is a moral responsibility to get it right,” says Sheila
Donnelly, president, Retriever Software. “When the system is allowed to proceed as planned and exercised
by Emergency Operations, the information is moved efficiently and accurately and the level of confidence
and calmness increases.”
For the state, TX SNETS provides a smooth, efficient process of effectively allocating search and rescue
resources for those who for any reason cannot self-evacuate. For evacuees, it means no longer having to
worry about losing a child in the chaos, leaving behind a pet, or being separated from critical special-needs
devices. For loved ones, it means keeping tabs on family members. And for all, it controls the turmoil and
reduces the extreme stress of a mass evacuation.
“We live in a world now where catastrophic events occur, whether man-made or natural,” says Chief Colley.
“Our priority is to take care of our citizens first and foremost, and in the 21st century we should be able to do
that. We had great support from the private sector and Motorola was one of them in a big way.”
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