By Mike Dano; Light Reading ~ Mar 08, 2019
AT&T and Verizon are locked in a heated battle over which carrier should sell wireless services to public safety users like police, firefighters and other first responders. And that battle is now spilling into a new front: 5G.
“As we build out 5G, it will be made available to public safety, just at the same time it will be made available to any other customer in terms of the network capability,” said Tami Erwin, chief of Verizon’s new Business unit and the executive in charge of selling Verizon services to public safety.
However, Erwin cautioned that Verizon would have to tailor its 5G pricing plans specifically for public safety users, and that might not happen immediately. “But the intent is to have that same capability available at the same time as the general public,” she said.
So will AT&T make its own 5G service immediately available to its public safety customers? Well, not exactly, according to an AT&T spokesperson, who declined to provide a specific timeline or launch date for AT&T 5G for public safety.
That’s because “it’s essential to ensure the standards, testing and critical capabilities are properly in place before advocating for the widespread use of this technology within public safety. Impressing the use of 5G upon public safety before this is complete and deemed ready for the public safety environment would show a lack of understanding for the public safety mission,” said AT&T’s spokesperson.
Specifically, technologies including Quality of Service, Priority and Preemption (QPP), Multimedia Priority Service (MPS), interoperability with Land Mobile Radio (LMR), mission-critical push-to-talk (MCPTT), mission-critical data (MCData) and mission-critical video (MCVideo) have not yet been written into the 3GPP’s 5G standard.
AT&T and FirstNet (the federal authority working with AT&T to build a nationwide wireless network for public safety) are certainly working on getting those standards in place — FirstNet even has a senior director of standards who is attending 3GPP meetings. But, as AT&T’s spokesperson said, “more information will be provided about 5G and FirstNet as this effort evolves.”