| Enhancing security at Correctional Facilities and Prisons |
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| Written by Administrator | |||||||
| Thursday, 21 August 2008 | |||||||
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A famous county prison that was established more than fifty years ago at the state of Ohio was mainly built to be operated and run manually just like all the other prisons and correctional buildings in that period of time. This was easily noticed in every aspect of the prison that could accommodate about seventy inmates. The officials of the prison implemented the manual plan of operations down to the locks of the cell doors, which were built based on the mechanical key-to-lock design. As can be expected, the manual reality of the locking system created copious amounts of logistical, and safety obstacles for corrections staff when transporting the prisoner residents to destination locations within the building. In spite of of whether the prisoners needed to use the law library, required bathing grooming services, educational program attendance, to meet with legal counsel, or demanded medical attention every movement had to be carried out in a manual manner, which required the guards to physically lock and unlock the cell door of each resident on a daily basis not to mention that this could also occur several times of the daytime. The county officials finally decided it was time to build a new facility especially after they noticed the old age of the jail and it's over crowdedness. A leading sheriff of the prison was thoroughly immersed in the process to establish a new correctional facility with enhanced, state-of-the-art machinery and management interfaces.
Although the actual construction was planned to take place in a couple of months, the security incorporation company rapidly developed and began examining the facility's integrated electronic security interface, which was primarily made up of seven touch-screen management units, four graphic displays, more than two hundred controlled and monitored gates, over a hundred and fifty intercom units, a hundred and sixty proximity readers and just over a hundred cameras for surveillance. Not to mention that the county correctional facility transition squad also had the privilege of visiting the manufacturing location in order to review the fully-operational interface weeks preceding the actual deployment in the correctional facility. The chief sheriff of the prison facility also noted that the ability to stopover the supplying plant and view the operation of the system before it was finally deployed was very useful to their planning and organization team, on top of that, it also enabled them to get a good overall image and an accurate sense for how the interface would operate in a real-world setting. Also, they were able to choose further available improvements to the system that were not provided by any other incorporating company, including a transportable touch-screen feature that could be managed via handheld PDAs and intercom audio recording to the logging information of the interface. As the installation process went on, the newly built adjacent prison facility was finally completed and awaiting the deployment of the inmates into its facility. As a direct result, the correctional facility has ordered an additional touch screen afterwards, which will be positioned in the facility's central management department. On top of that the facility also has added more than fifty proximity readers to the initial installation. The new security system can now integrate and communicate with the facility maintenance area and the newly established emergency procedures department, situated in the basement of the old property, via fiber for the incorporated management interface. The correction facility was finally able to considerably maximize its inmate monitoring competence, thanks to the deployment of security electronics interface. The spontaneous and measurable nature of the touch-screens, as well as its simplicity of modification enables a single corrections guard to view the actions of more than forty inmates at a time where only a little over twenty inmates were allowed to be monitored. The chief sheriff of the facility was especially pleased since staffing was always a concern in the correctional atmosphere, and by utilizing the security integration company integrated security electronic system, they now had the ability to operate their staff members a lot more resourcefully. On top of that, with the new construction of the facility and with the utilization of the various security cameras, everything can now be conducted within the housing units in place of the constant movement mandated in the old building.
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