In the report, the top five camera location priorities were at entrances and exits (76 percent), hallways (62 percent), and lunchrooms, playgrounds, and gyms (53 percent). Only a minority of respondents wanted cameras in classrooms (36 percent) and locker rooms and bathrooms (18 percent).
“Many school administrators will throw up some cameras to fortify their front entrance,” he continues. “But the reality is, it is what is behind those fortified walls that really makes up the heart of your school security program—which is your people.”
Of course, investing in “the people side” of school security takes time and money, he says. It often means professional development training not just for teachers and administrators, but for support staff: the bus drivers, who are the first and last ones to see students every day. Secretaries who might take a call from someone making a bomb threat. Custodians and food service staff, who may be the first ones to notice any strangers on campus. “They are on the front lines,” he says. “They should be included in tabletop exercises, along with the first responders.”
Click here to read article.
Other posts that might interest you
Wall Street Journal – The Daily Startup: Barracuda Networks Co-Founder Launches Video Surveillance Startup
Barracuda Networks Inc. co-founder Dean Drako is launching another company–Eagle Eye Networks Inc., a startup that aims to do for video surveillance what Dropbox did for file sharing by making…
June 26, 2014
Dow Jones: Serial Entrepreneur and Ex-Barracuda CEO Launches Eagle Eye Networks to Take Video to the Cloud
Dow Jones wrote about our Founder and our Launch. Click Here to read the full article (pay wall)
January 21, 2014
Security Info Watch: Eagle Eye Networks enters VMS market
Barracuda Networks Founder Dean Drako discusses why he started a video security company. Click Here To Read the Full Article
January 23, 2014