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Home Blog Page 967

Adt Protects The G8 Summit

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The G8 Summit 10, located its temporary staff offices in the King and Prince Resort Hotel on St. Simon Island, a few miles away from the actual G8 Summit meeting held on Sea Island off the coast of Savannah, Georgia. To secure the offices, ADT strategically placed video surveillance cameras in the hotel’s stairwells, hallways and entries.

Federal Transportation Security Administration’s Paul Hackenberry selected ADT for the security project. Hackenberry’s regular job is federal security director for the Jacksonville International Airport, but he was tapped to handle the G8-related security not covered by the Secret Service. That made his group responsible for the offices on St. Simon Island and a portion of the motor pool at the summit.

“ADT provided us with some very useful technology,” said Hackenberry. “It (the system) did its job, within our budget and lowered our manpower requirements.”
The security system included cameras, digital video recorders, monitors, keypad locks and motion detectors. It protected more than 100 workers in the temporary offices at the resort hotel, the call center where all incoming calls were screened, a portion of the motor pool and the registration area where all attendees received their identifying credentials. ADT also designed special equipment to alert security officers if one of the many doors in the office area was left opened or ajar.

“ADT was able to work with us to build a customized system that met our specific needs,” said Hackenberry. “For example, they designed a special light box for us that connected to the door locks and would light up when a door was opened or not completely closed, which might otherwise have been hard to distinguish on video.”

Identix Wins At Last

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DHS previously had awarded the BPA to Identix after the agency had conducted exhaustive evaluations, and subsequent re-evaluations, of all proposals. DHS’ evaluations and re-evaluations included detailed analysis of the technical and financial aspects of the various proposed solutions, and resulted in DHS selecting Identix, not once, but twice, as the vendor offering the best overall value for live scan systems. Upon receipt of the ruling by the GAO, DHS lifted the stop work order that had been in place as a result of the protest, and instructed Identix to resume delivery of live scan systems under a previously issued initial purchase order under the BPA.

“The U.S. Government, and specifically DHS, is a highly valued customer,” said Identix President & CEO Dr. Joseph J. Atick. “While the protest process relating to federal procurements can often be frustrating, in this case, the independent adjudication by the GAO, which followed the multiple technical and financial evaluations undertaken by DHS, results in the validation of Identix’ industry-leading biometrics technology. When the world’s current largest adopter of biometrics technology repeatedly puts its stamp of approval on you, it sends a clear message to a growing global industry about the technological expertise and value proposition Identix offers.”

Honeywell Acquires Vindicator Technologies

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Ben Cornett, Honeywell Security president, said in a release that the Vindicator acquisition would extend Honeywell’s range of offerings. “Vindicator has very specialized technology, strong expertise and products that protect many of the world’s most critical assets,” Cornett says.

Vindicator becomes part of the Honeywell Access Systems business unit, and while Honeywell will become the main branding, the Vindicator name will remain on the product line descriptions. “It is truly one of those situations that is a triple win for us, the customers and Honeywell. It increases our global presence with our foreign language platform and additional distribution channels,” Gross told SSN. “For Honeywell, Vindicator provides a high-end product platform – a platform that has priority level one approvals and a product line that can talk across any communications media.”

A100 Million On Ports

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The new changes will give Australian ports a number one security ranking for container scanning, enabling ships outward bound to meet the strict regulations being applied by the U.S. to its trading partners. Good news for access and ID suppliers is the stipulation that all workers will have to carry photo ID cards and pass through security checkpoints of the same standard as those in the airline industry. Also appealing to industry suppliers is the news that a whopping $A17 million will be spent installing video surveillance systems at 63 customs designated ports around Australia.

Making the announcement, Prime Minister Howard said it was important to be aware that “74 per cent of Australian exports and imports move by ship each year and that (trade) has a total value of $188 billion.” The PM said that a total of 244 maritime security plans covering the activities of about 400 maritime industry participants were developed and approved over the last six months.

Mr Howard said the initiatives would cost $A102 million over 4 years, and would include $A48 million to enhance and increase the rate of container examinations of the Australian Customs Service customs container x-ray facilities in Brisbane, Sydney, Melbourne and Fremantle, with the biggest increase in container examinations will take place in Brisbane.

“We’re going to spend a further $9.3 million to enable Customs to board more vessels at the first port of arrival in Australia, and this will include more random checks so that any ship entering any port can expect to be boarded,” Mr Howard explained. “We’ll extend the Customs closed circuit television network to all 63 Customs proclaimed ports at a cost of over $17 million over the 4-year period.

“There will be posting of specialist immigration officials to ports to assist with clearance of passengers and seafarers, and that will cost $12.3 million. We’ll introduce a maritime security identification card for maritime industry employees. We’ll provide additional resources to further strengthen intelligence collection and the provision of intelligence information within key ports, and we’ll provide an additional $4.4 million to allow the Government’s Transport Security Operations Centre to work 24 hours a day, seven days a week.”

The PM said the government had already established a dedicated taskforce to examine the security of Australia’s offshore oil and gas facilities and assets and consider Australian Government capabilities and protocols for interdicting ships and other vessels at sea.

“We’re undertaking already a detailed examination of security arrangements for transporting high consequence dangerous goods and this will build on the recent Council of Australian Government’s work on ammonium nitrate, with the aim of restricting access to materials that could be misused by terrorists,” Mr Howard said. “And we’ll provide some limited additional powers for privately engaged maritime security guards to enable them to respond with appropriate authority to breaches of security within ports.

“At the same time, we’re strengthening transport security in Australia and we’re also working with our neighbours in the Asian Pacific region to improve their transport security. And in particular, Australia is working with neighbouring governments to ensure that ships and aircraft entering Australia from the region comply fully with international security standards.

According to Mr Howard, Australia is planning to host a number of transport security experts within the region to help in building its capacity. He said agreement has been reached with the Philippines Government to enhance maritime security at selected key shipping ports, and as previously announced, and…Australia is contributing $36.8 million to the establishment of a Jakarta centre for law enforcement cooperation, which was opened early July.

Australia is undeniably ahead of the game in port security. All international ports are required by the International Maritime Organization, a U.N. agency, to apply set security standards by July 1. But in mid-June, only 654 of the 6,114 ports subject to the international security code had complied. Reports suggest few of the still unsecured ports will meet the deadline.

Meanwhile, security experts say there’s no chance customs authorities in any country could check the millions of containers moving around the world – even with X-ray or explosives/radiation detection scanners.

Powerful Performance

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Diebold also achieved record second quarter revenue of $US552,043,000, 14.8 per cent higher than the second quarter of 2003. This significant increase in revenue was led by strong growth in financial self service products which was fuelled by strong demand for the company’s new Opteva product solution.

New Number 2

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Also completed was the dissolution of Group 4 Falck into Group 4 and Falck. As part of the merger, Group 4 Falck’s Rescue & Safety business and the net profits from the recent sale of Global Solutions Ltd. Go to Falck. Meanwhile, access control manufacturer AMAG Technology becomes a subsidiary of Group 4.

Gunnebo Swallows Chubb Off-Cuts

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Historically, Gunnebo’s penetration of the market in Italy has tended to be low, and the acquisition of Chubb Lips S.p.A., which is active in both physical security and electronic security, will also give the Group a strong market position in Italy. The Italian business has an annual turnover of some MEUR 15 and around 80 employees. Most of the business is located in Milan.

“To date, only a small proportion of our sales have been in the Italian security market,” says Bjarne Holmqvist, Gunnebo’s President and CEO. “The acquisition of Chubb Lips S.p.A., which already distributes some of Chubb Safes’ security products and has some 20 per cent of Italy’s physical security market, will give us a very strong platform for further growth.”

The physical security business of N.V. Chubb Security Systems in Belgium has an annual turnover of around MEUR 6 and some 30 employees, of whom 16 are service technicians. The business consists of physical security products and service for banks and the retail sector.

“In acquiring Chubb’s physical security business, we are improving the sales potential in Belgium for our products and strengthening our position, especially on the service side,” says Bjarne Holmqvist.

The acquisitions are expected to make only a marginal impact on earnings per share for the current year, but will make a positive contribution as of 2005.

Biometric Passports – 12 Months Leeway

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Australia has a number of pilot passport programs under way but bringing them into operation and upgrading every Australian’s passport will take a long time. It’s not just privacy issues that challenge implementation of biometric passports. Getting hardware and software right, as well as selecting an effective and widely acceptable biometric is proving an ongoing challenge.

Fire Extinguisher Review

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One of the consequences of this proposed plan could be the end of production at Ferndale, South Wales. Final assembly of high pressure cylinders would move to the Chubb national distribution centre near Birmingham. 156 jobs would be affected in Ferndale. 26 jobs would be created in other UK locations. Chubb’s facilities in St Florentin in France and Dingley in Australia could also be affected.

The global extinguisher market is highly competitive. Investment and efficiency programmes at Chubb’s production facilities at Ferndale, South Wales and St Florentin, France have helped Chubb’s competitiveness but it is increasingly difficult to combat the lower cost suppliers from other parts of the world.
Eric Patry, Regional President of Chubb said: “Our top priority has to be providing our customers with a high quality product at a competitive price. Our workforce in our fire extinguisher production facilities did everything they could to be competitive but economic conditions today make it difficult for us to compete against other lower cost countries”.