Posts Tagged ‘school’

Vehicle Tracking Installed in All Chicago School Buses

Monday, September 14th, 2009

bus-fleetBuses rolling out for the first day of classes at the Chicago Public Schools had extra assurance they would run efficiently, thanks to vehicle tracking technology.

The school system added remote vehicle tracking devices to each of their 1,600 buses this summer. The significant cash outlay for the vehicle tracking system will be covered in part through a $1 million grant. School officials say they hope the vehicle tracking costs will be recouped in a short period of time through less fuel and maintenance costs. Vehicle tracking allows supervisors back at the main depot to keep tabs on each and every vehicle tracking them by remote computer over the Internet. With proper management, the vehicle tracking system will help decrease or eliminate breakdowns, late routes, exceeding the speed limit and excessive idling.

The vehicle tracking project raised a few eyebrows among the general public, with the knowledge that many school systems are cutting budgets back, especially in the area of transportation, due to the tight economy. Chicago Public Schools is the third largest school system in the nation. Could it afford vehicle tracking?

It’s estimated only about one quarter of school districts in the U.S. use vehicle tracking, although the American School Bus Council endorses vehicle tracking technology. A spokesman for the agency said it was because of the Chicago School District’s large size that it would experience a quick and effective return on investment. GPS tracking makes routing more efficient, he said, and that alone should cut down on mileage and therefore fuel consumption immediately.

Parents are also pleased at the increased level of safety that vehicle tracking promises. When parents ask about the whereabouts of child, or the progress of a bus route, vehicle tracking will reveal exactly when any bus arrived at a certain stop and where it is at the current time.

This type of tracking is called real-time vehicle tracking. A small GPS tracking receiver is placed in each bus. Vehicle tracking involves readings, or “hits,” marking the device’s location based on satellites orbiting in space. Speed, latitude, longitude, and heading are monitored by vehicle tracking. Position updates are every few seconds. That vehicle tracking data is transmitted through a cell network, and it’s all assembled on a map on the Internet. The dispatcher, manager or other supervisor – usually with special vehicle tracking software – can watch a full fleet of buses as they progress on their routes, moment to moment, or zoom in and concentrate on just one. Vehicle tracking also keeps records of past routes, so any day or segment of a day can be recalled, for reports or perhaps to look for persistent inefficiencies.

Surveillance

Thursday, September 10th, 2009

school-hallwayNew Jersey School to be Equipped with Surveillance Cameras

As part of a strategic initiative to try and give students and faculty additional protection, Millburn High School in New Jersey will begin installing surveillance cameras over the next year. Approximately $100,000 was set aside to finance the surveillance project and Patricia Balko, interim business administrator for the district, is hoping the security plan will broaden to other schools as more funds become accessible. Another key figure in the surveillance project, board president Noreen Brunini, stated that security initiative was not being pushed into action over any specific event, threat, or incident, but was rather a preventative measure. Millburn High School is already ranked as one of the state’s schools.

Surveillance cameras have become increasing popular with school districts as a way to monitor potential illegal activity as well as ensure the safety of students and staff.

Surveillance: The Answer?

Although Brunini stated that no specific event was the catalyst for the surveillance measure, the security initiative does come shortly after a high-profile and public incident earlier in the year where a student got into an altercation with another student, beating him with a baseball bat in the school’s parking lot. As horrific and barbaric as the incident was many people began asking some important questions such as:

Would the fight have occurred if surveillance cameras were installed in the parking lot?

Will surveillance cameras prevent this type of situation from happening in the future?

Is this an effective and appropriate way to spend tax dollars?

Would surveillance cameras have prevented a serious situation such as Columbine?

Unfortunately, the answers are not simple and should come with concern. Surveillance cameras are great tools to record the movements of people; however, almost all surveillance cameras used in schools are not monitored by anyone in a “control room” type of environment where staff can quickly dispatch authorities to the scene of any trouble. The most effective surveillance programs typically involve a combination of video surveillance and human monitoring. Surveillance cameras can do nothing to stop a situation when or if it is occurring all they can do is record the events for future playback. In fact, the surveillance cameras probably would have done nothing to stop or even help the student who was assaulted in the parking lot with a baseball bat. The only thing that may have prevented the fight in the parking lot, or at least brought a quick end to it, would have been additional security in the form of people, watching and walking the grounds of the campus.

At the end of the day, everybody wants to send their children and teens to school and have the peace of mind knowing they are safe. However, is the spending of millions of tax payer dollars in surveillance or security cameras the answer? Convenient stores and other retail locations are all equipped with surveillance cameras and that does nothing to reduce the crime rates. The only stores that have a solid track record of success against crime or deviant behavior are the establishments or companies that have security guards or personnel monitoring the grounds. Nothing is stronger at deterring law breakers than the presence of a uniformed guard. The questions that need to be addressed now are:

Is the money being allocated in an effective manner or is the school having a knee jerk reaction to one terrible and publicized event?

Are there other alternatives that could be more cost-effective?

Surveillance cameras have done little or nothing to reduce burglaries; will they be as ineffective in reducing school violence?