I approved this post due to the information obtained from the county. Please keep in mind that RR does not allow never-ending discussions on this topic. I am not sure the quote provided by the county is completely accurate re: CJIS - so if someone has that memo/policy handy, it would be nice to see that posted. I do concur with the author that cell and/or MDT are used much more than radio for the really sensitive stuff. That said, I am not a supporter of Fire/EMS or LE Dispatch type comms being encrypted - 'teletype' and 'tactical' channels - sure. Again, I retort - this is nothing new in Florida. Orange Co and Duval have been LE encrypted for many, MANY years now...... and Lake Co was probably the first to completely encrypt all public safety on their system (police and fire).
It will be interesting to see what happens with this policy in the future should a large casualty event occur - like a direct hurricane hit. It's time to accept the decision of the county and move on, because the likelihood of reversion to non-secure comms is very, very low.
EDIT: I wanted to add this and forgot. The decision to encrypt/not encrypt was NOT (to my knowledge) a blanket decision by the County. This decision was left up to every single agency head who uses the system. In other words, just because XYZ agency uses the system, there was no requirement by the county to be secure. That decision was left up to the Chief / Department Head.