Shire of Mundaring
Find out how the Shire of Mundaring was able to quickly provision extra bandwidth during a natural disaster.
The challenge
As bushfires tore through Western Australia, the Shire of Mundaring set up an incident control centre at its indoor sports facility, Mundaring Arena. The centre housed the bushfire emergency coordination and response effort, which included a number of state and local agencies. State Premier Mark McGowan even visited and conducted a news brief from the site.
The situation was critical and constantly evolved as the council and other agencies worked hard to keep communication operational, meet the needs of the people and animals that were evacuated, and continued fighting the fire that was burning out of control. With strong winds and high heat intensity, the fire spread to the neighbouring City of Swan, with more than 500 firefighters working day and night to contain the blaze.
While basic Wi-Fi is usually provided at Mundaring Arena - normally kept to 25Mbps - it rapidly became apparent the bandwidth wasn't coping with the increased usage, as agencies struggled to get critical news and advice online and access information.
With the emergency response coordination heavily dependent on a functioning Wi-Fi service, the Shire feared it might take days to provision higher bandwidth to the site - days they didn't have to spare.
The challenge
As bushfires tore through Western Australia, the Shire of Mundaring set up an incident control centre at its indoor sports facility, Mundaring Arena. The centre housed the bushfire emergency coordination and response effort, which included a number of state and local agencies. State Premier Mark McGowan even visited and conducted a news brief from the site.
The situation was critical and constantly evolved as the council and other agencies worked hard to keep communication operational, meet the needs of the people and animals that were evacuated, and continued fighting the fire that was burning out of control. With strong winds and high heat intensity, the fire spread to the neighbouring City of Swan, with more than 500 firefighters working day and night to contain the blaze.
While basic Wi-Fi is usually provided at Mundaring Arena - normally kept to 25Mbps - it rapidly became apparent the bandwidth wasn't coping with the increased usage, as agencies struggled to get critical news and advice online and access information.
With the emergency response coordination heavily dependent on a functioning Wi-Fi service, the Shire feared it might take days to provision higher bandwidth to the site - days they didn't have to spare.
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