In an announcement, the state's Chief Information Officer and the Office for Technology said M/A-COM "has failed to deliver a satisfactory and acceptable public-safety communications network and is in default of the contract."
The state said it exercised its right to terminate the contract for cause and presented a demand for $50 million "without delay." Because of the drawn-out arguments between the two sides before the termination, it's likely there will be litigation over the network deployment.
While M/A-COM, a unit of Tyco Electronics, has had various networking contracts with the state since 1960, the main contract for SWN began in 2005. SWN was planned to link public-safety agencies across the state from the tip of Long Island to Niagara Falls, and the termination notice means the state has no current concrete plans for a statewide public-safety network.
"The technology New York settled on when the project started was really in its sunset days compared to IP-related technology," said wireless network expert Craig Settles of Successful.com in an e-mail. "By the time you rev up and start deploying a project that huge, years have already passed before you barely get out of the gate."
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