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Could this be right!?

I live in Lake Geneva, WI. I've been trying to find police frequencies for my scanner. I subscribed to, & looked on the National Radio Data site:

www.nationalradiodata.com

& found the Lake Geneva Police Department listed as using frequencies from 4940, 4955 & 4975 MHz. Is this possible?

Last time I checked, they were using 857.21250 MHz for their main channel.

Coincidentally, I haven't heard any traffic on the 857 MHz frequency, of late.

I know that some police departments are going, or have gone digital (& you could at least hear the data bursts with DATA SKIP turned off), but could they also have gone to such a high frequency, as well?

It seems to me that frequencies that high would be so tightly line-of-sight that mobile or portable use would be problematical.

Please help.
 
Or possibly even 4.940, 4.955 and 4.975 (which, of course, is 4940, 4955 and 4975 kHz respectively), if they have equipment that's ancient enough.
 
From the FCC...

"470-512 MHz (jpeg)
Shared with UHF-TV; available only in 11 cities
Channels are spaced every 6.25 kHz
Authorized Bandwidth is 20 kHz, 11.25 kHz or 6 kHz "

So I doubt that they have skipped a decimal point making it 494.0 MHz.

4940 KHz is possible up in the north woods.

But wouldn't the equivalent of an STL link be a better choice and that it really is a 4940 MHz linking frequency.
 
I'd say those are links between the 800 mhz sites, they probably have multiple sites to help with dead spots in the coverage.
 
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