The $543 Million Lesson: Why Wi-Fi-Based RTLS Failed at the VA — and What It Teaches Us About Life-Safety
By Mike Maurer, President, MGM Solutions | 35+ Years in RTLS
In 2012, the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs set out to deploy a real-time locating system (RTLS) across 152 medical centers nationwide. The contract ceiling: $543 million. The technology foundation: Wi-Fi. The outcome is now a documented cautionary tale — and it validates a warning MGM Solutions had sounded publicly a full year before the contract was even awarded.
The Warning Came First
In June 2011, MGM founder Mike Maurer presented engineering rationale at a national RTLS conference explaining why 2.4 GHz Wi-Fi-based RTLS could not deliver the reliability that life-safety applications demand. The argument was rooted in physics, not opinion: high frequencies like Wi-Fi’s 2.4 GHz produce short wavelengths that struggle to penetrate the walls, floors, and dense construction of hospitals — so they cannot reliably locate tags through a real building.
This wasn’t a guess. MGM’s team had conducted extensive multi-platform frequency testing at a VA medical center in 2000–2002, concluding clearly: the higher the frequency, the less reliable it is for locating people and equipment through building materials.
TV Interview: Mike Maurer explains why 433 MHz RF outperforms Wi-Fi and BLEWatch on YouTube →
TV Interview: Mike Maurer explains why 433 MHz RF outperforms Wi-Fi and BLE
What Happened Next
The following year, the VA awarded a $543 million RTLS contract to HP Enterprise Services. By design, the system relied on triangulated signals from multiple Wi-Fi access points to locate tagged equipment — the exact approach Mike had cautioned against.
The results are a matter of public record:
The VA’s own Office of Inspector General found the department had obligated $431 million to the vendor “without a Government acceptance of a functional RTLS solution.”
Internal VA communications, later reported in the press, described fears of a “catastrophic failure of the program as a whole.”
The vendor, in turn, blamed the VA’s Wi-Fi infrastructure, citing 137 non-operational access points — underscoring exactly how fragile a Wi-Fi-dependent location system is.
Sources: VA Office of Inspector General audit (reported by FedScoop, December 2017); Healthcare IT News; Nextgov; Austin American-Statesman.
In other words: a half-billion-dollar program built on the wrong frequency struggled for years to deliver a functional system — precisely the failure mode the physics predicted.
Why This Matters Now: BLE Is the Same Mistake
Here’s the part that should concern anyone evaluating RTLS today. The industry is now promoting Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) as the modern, next-generation answer for healthcare RTLS. But BLE operates at the same 2.4 GHz as Wi-Fi — and at even lower transmission power to conserve tag battery life. Lower power means shorter range and worse wall penetration: the opposite of what life-safety requires.
For asset tracking — finding a wheelchair or an IV pump — BLE can be adequate. For life-safety, adopting the same frequency at lower power is, as Mike puts it, “jumping from the pot into the fire.”
Reliable life-safety RTLS uses a multi-frequency architecture that respects the physics:
Sub-800 MHz RF (such as 433 MHz Long-Range) for wall-penetrating, whole-campus communication — indoors and outdoors.
Low-Frequency (125 kHz) Exciters for correct floor and choke-point detection at doors and elevators.
Diffused Infrared (IR) for sub-room, bed-level positioning.
Critically, these process business rules on-premise, with deterministic sub-second response times — no cloud latency, no dependence on an internet connection or a remote data center staying online. That’s how a system can lock a door before a patient exits, rather than after.
This is the architecture behind SecurTRAK — proven in VA medical centers since 2002, and across public hospitals, correctional facilities, and assisted living communities for over two decades.
The One Question to Ask Before Choosing Any RTLS
Before selecting an RTLS for a hospital or VA facility, ask: “Will this technology reliably locate a person pressing a panic button through a concrete wall in under one second?” If the answer involves cloud processing, 2.4 GHz, or the phrase “in most environments” — keep looking. A $543 million program already learned that lesson the hard way.
All dollar figures and the failure timeline are independently verified against primary sources (VA OIG audit via FedScoop; Healthcare IT News; Nextgov; Austin American-Statesman). The 2011 conference presentation and 2000–2002 VA frequency testing are MGM’s documented account.