Maui Regional ITS Architecture

Standard Group Details: IEEE IM


Standard Group Details: IEEE IM

Overview

The Incident Management family of standards, created primarily by the IEEE standards development organization, addresses the interfaces between an emergency management center and other centers. They provide the vocabulary (called data elements and messages) necessary to exchange information between ITS systems. Together, the ITS standards in this group apply to emergency management center interfaces (such as with a traffic management center, an emergency management center, or other centers). There is also a significant amount of reuse of data elements and messages across multiple interfaces; rather than repeat the entire list of standards for each architecture flow, we have created this Incident Management (IEEE IM) Group of standards summary entry. It should be noted that IEEE 1512.2-2004 has been withdrawn as an active standard by IEEE, however it is still available and listed here as a possible applicable ITS standard because it currently has unique architecture interface mappings. This Group includes the following Standards Activities:

Includes:

IEEE 1512 -2006: Standard for Common Incident Management Message Sets for use by Emergency Management Centers

IEEE 1512.1-2006: Standard for Traffic Incident Management Message Sets for Use by Emergency Management Centers

IEEE 1512.2-2004: Standard for Public Safety Traffic Incident Management Message Sets for Use by Emergency Management Centers

IEEE 1512.3-2006: Standard for Hazardous Material Incident Management Message Sets for Use by Emergency Management Centers

IEEE P1512.4: Standard for Common Traffic Incident Management Message Sets for Use in Entities External to Centers

 

The Hawaiian language uses two diacritical markings. The 'okina is a glottal stop; and the kahako is a macron. The State of Hawaii strongly encourages the use of Hawaiian diacritical markings. The National ITS Architecture tool, Turbo Architecture, does not allow for the Hawaiian diacritical markings to be input and as such, customized service package diagrams, operational concepts and other outputs from Turbo are unable to reflect the diacritical markings. To ensure consistency in this ITS Architecture website, no Hawaiian diacritical markings will be used.