Skip to main content

GTT implements emergency vehicle pre-emption in Florida city

Global Traffic Technologies (GTT) is to provide the city of Deltona in Florida with its latest-generation Opticom GPS-enabled emergency vehicle pre-emption solution. Opticom works alongside intersection controllers to help ensure emergency vehicles can move through intersections rapidly and without incident. In Deltona, the Opticom system will be used by the Glassy Mountain Fire Department at 23 key intersections in an effort to improve response times and operational safety. The Opticom solution inclu
March 22, 2017 Read time: 1 min
542 Global Traffic Technologies (GTT) is to provide the city of Deltona in Florida with its latest-generation Opticom GPS-enabled emergency vehicle pre-emption solution. Opticom works alongside intersection controllers to help ensure emergency vehicles can move through intersections rapidly and without incident.

In Deltona, the Opticom system will be used by the Glassy Mountain Fire Department at 23 key intersections in an effort to improve response times and operational safety.

The Opticom solution includes a GPS component for location and wireless radio communications between authorised emergency vehicles and the intersections they approach. When an emergency vehicle needs to navigate an intersection, the Opticom system on-board the vehicle sends a request to the intersection’s controller ahead of its arrival, which requests a green light, clearing a path to enable the vehicle’s expedited passage.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Receiving real time passenger information in Finland
    February 3, 2012
    David Crawford sees lively prospects for Finnish innovation
  • MIT researchers hack into traffic lights
    August 22, 2014
    With permission from a local road agency, researchers in from the University of Michigan hacked into nearly 100 wirelessly networked traffic lights, highlighting security issues that they say are likely to pervade networked traffic infrastructure around the country. More than 40 states currently use such systems to keep traffic flowing as efficiently as possible, helping to reduce emissions and delays. The team, led by University of Michigan computer scientist J. Alex Halderman, found three major weaknes
  • Social media mooted for traffic management
    November 13, 2012
    SQLstream’s Ronnie Beggs discusses with Jason Barnes the potential and pitfalls of using social media for traffic monitoring and management. cataclysmic events such as hurricanes and tsunami have challenged perceptions of what constitutes robust traffic management infrastructure in recent times. Presumptions that only fixed systems could offer high levels of unbroken service, accuracy and communication bandwidth, have been taught some hard lessons by nature. In many respects wireless systems now represent t
  • Don’t forget security threat, says Econolite
    May 6, 2020
    A new level of communication is helping deliver on the promise of Vision Zero and a more sustainable future. But amid the promise, Econolite’s Sunny Chakravarty suggests we need to be mindful of the potential downsides in an age of mass connectivity