Advertisement

County Awards Freeway Phone Contract : Laguna Hills Firm to Start Installing 1,000 Boxes by September

Share
Times Urban Affairs Writer

Orange County’s first freeway emergency call boxes will be available to stranded motorists by September under a $4.7-million contract awarded Monday to a Laguna Hills firm.

A thousand call boxes, to be installed at the rate of about 75 to 120 per month, are expected to be in place on freeways in the county within a year to 18 months. Initially, transportation officials said, the boxes will be placed at half-mile intervals on the county’s 135-mile freeway system, starting at the Los Angeles County line and working toward the center of Orange County.

Eventually, the telephone boxes will be at quarter-mile intervals, officials said.

Acting as the county’s so-called Service Authority for Freeway Emergencies, members of the Orange County Transportation Commission voted 6-0 Monday to award the freeway telephone installation contract to Cellular Communications Corp.

Advertisement

The firm was recommended over two rival companies--Cubic Communications and Tel-Con Inc.--by a 10-person evaluation team appointed by county transportation commissioners.

Lowest Bid Rejected

Cubic’s bid, the lowest among the three finalists, was $3.7 million. However, OCTC spokesman Tom Fortune said the bid was rejected because the firm was about a year behind Cellular Communications in product development and had less experience.

Fortune said Tel-Con’s $11-million bid for a non-cellular system was rejected because of the cost.

Fortune said Cellular Communications also was awarded a 10-year, $1.7-million maintenance contract to service the call boxes.

Los Angeles has been the only county in the state with a full-scale emergency phone system. The system--3,500 phones at quarter-mile intervals--was installed a decade ago. The Los Angeles system logs about 70,000 calls per month.

The California Highway Patrol estimates that it receives about 19,000 to 20,000 calls a month for freeway emergencies in Orange County.

Advertisement

San Diego County is proceeding with a call box plan similar to Orange County’s.

The call box projects in both counties are being financed through special legislation that authorizes a $1-a-year surcharge collected by the state on local vehicle registrations and funneled to each county’s Service Authority for Freeway Emergencies.

Advertisement