Page 22 - Campus Security & Life Safety, July/August 2022
P. 22

Video Surveillance
Putnam City Schools Rewrites the Lesson Plan for District Surveillance
For Mark Stout, Chief of Police for the Putnam City School District in Warr Acres, Okla., every day is an education in the newest security and surveillance technologies.
With 28 schools and 10 administrative facilities spread across 43 square miles of the Oklahoma City Metroplex area, Stout and his team are continually evaluating the dis- trict’s security infrastructure to identify new methods for keeping students, faculty and staff safe.
For the past several years, those efforts have included replacing aging and outdated security cameras with the latest Hanwha Techwin models. As a result, the district is benefitting from a range of new technologies critical for school safety—including artificial intelligence, multi-view and multi-sensor capabilities, discreet form factors, easy deployment, flexible configuration and A/V analytics for effective data-gathering.
The ongoing upgrade has led to a signifi- cant improvement in operational perfor- mance and efficiency, situational awareness and a noticeable reduction in on-site inci- dents.
“Our response times are faster, our secu- rity procedures are more efficient and we can allocate our resources more appropriately to match the unique needs of each school,” said Stout.
The district’s camera count currently totals about 1,500 Hanwha Techwin cameras, a mixture of P-series AI dome, multi-sensor, panoramic, X-series fisheye and PTZ mod- els. More installations are planned in the future as the district adds new facilities and expands its current venues.
Putnam City Schools has deployed secu- rity cameras and access control systems for decades. However, recent rapid growth in the student population, heightened school activ- ity levels and expanded campus footprints
made upgrading a critical requirement for effective long-term surveillance.
The district includes elementary schools, middle schools and high schools with a total of approximately 20,000 students and about 3,500 teaching, maintenance and operations staff. Each building varies in terms of age, layout, size, facilities and occupancy, mean- ing the security systems in place must also vary accordingly to keep pace.
Putnam City Schools is working with its long-time system integrator, Orion Security Solutions, based in Edmond, Okla. “Putnam City's system never sits stagnant,” said Roger Smith, account executive at Orion. “They are always looking to use the newest technolo- gies and stay on top of things.”
The Orion and Putnam City teams meet regularly to discuss potential system weak- nesses or vulnerabilities and continually iden- tify new ways to strengthen their surveillance capabilities.
22 campuslifesecurity.com | JULY/AUGUST 2022


































































































   20   21   22   23   24