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School Safety: Safeguarding Your Campus

Jul 1, 2011 12:00 PM, By David Edgar

Maximizing school IP investments with emergency mass notification.

Mass alerting systems have come a long way since the days of passive sirens blaring out a non-specific signal. Today, innovative IP-based emergency mass notification systems are can deliver detailed alerts to multiple devices and receive feedback on status of individuals, all in minutes.

Investing in a network-centric emergency mass notification system that leverages the existing IP infrastructure and integrates with existing fire alarm notification systems or public address systems has proven to be the most effective way of alerting the most people in the shortest amount of time—regardless of the danger.

By enabling education institutions to lower capital investments, emergency mass notification systems are removing the barrier to entry and setting the standard for network-centric mass notification deployment. Universities which are maximizing their IP investments with the deployment of IP-based emergency mass notification systems to extend legacy life safety systems in support of multi-threat alerting include:

Sidebar: U.S. Air Force Air University

To understand the different levels of alert distribution, education institutions can look to the Air Force’s Air University as an example. The U.S. Air Force Air University, situated on Maxwell Air Force Base, provides higher-education options to Air Force enlisted and civilian personnel. When an emergency occurs on base—whether inclement weather or a potential attack—the Maxwell command post operators can quickly notify all base personnel, university staff and students with alerts sent to computer desktops and other network-enabled devices.

Though the base can address facility-level alerts, on occasion, a situation will warrant a larger response. In these instances, Maxwell may need to alert another base within the Air Education and Training Command (AETC), the organization Maxwell AFB is part of. Because AETC adopted a standard alerting system for use at all of its bases, any single base can alert others as well as quickly communicate with headquarters. This can be accomplished within the same user interface that launches the alert to Maxwell. Though in this instance the alerts are being sent to another Air Force base, in a civilian scenario, alerts can automatically be sent to police, fire, rescue and community alerting systems.

Sidebar: Texas A&M University

Texas A&M University, College Station, has decided to deploy an integrated mass-notification solution to help to protect students, faculty and personnel in the event of an emergency. The use of network-centric emergency mass alerting software provides Texas A&M with the capability to send out emergency alerts to its campus populace through multiple devices, including campus computers via pop up alerts, Emergency Alert System radio broadcast, cable TV, telephones, and mass e-mail and text messages, all from a single Web-based console.

Texas A&M’s solution addresses one of the biggest challenges of deploying an emergency notification system—the seamless integration of disparate communications channels. By unifying multiple forms of alerting through a single integrated system, Texas A&M simplifies its notification process while attaining a high percentage of population reach through redundant systems that alert people campuswide. Additionally, the emergency notification system provides the university with a significant cost saving by using the university’s existing on-site communications infrastructure.

Those university’s emergency managers with alerting authority can trigger alerts from their browsers and send out information through a wide variety of communications channels. They can select from predefined alerts or create a custom alert and quickly notify students and staff about the emergency. Alerts that reach personal devices are all tracked in real time for response and accountability reporting. At the same time, alerts also can reach the campus cable TV and radio station.

Sidebar: UCLA

UCLA deploys a unified, network-centric alerting solution that turns its existing IP network into a reliable and effective mass notification system. UCLA uses a highly comprehensive alerting system that can reach the campus population through many channels simultaneously, including: computers, telephones (mobile and landline), text messaging, e-mail, campus sirens, campus cable TV, campus radio and the Emergency Digital Information System.

Known as UCLA’s “BruinAlert”, the emergency mass-notification system is used to protect more than 60,000 people across campus and consistently reaches more than 99 percent of target populace. The system provides UCLA with significant cost savings by leveraging the university’s existing alerting infrastructure. Its network-centric approach uses the campus’ IP network to enable faster mass notification over a large and geographically dispersed area.

UCLA’s emergency alerting system has been used successfully many in real-life situations. These include:

-Alerted and provided follow-up information to the UCLA population during a 5.8 magnitude earthquake that occurred near Los Angeles.

Effectively alerted the UCLA population about a wildfire near campus.

Successfully notified the campus community of a suspicious package found in parking structure adjacent to a medical office.

Sidebar: Baylor University Medical Center

Baylor University Medical Center at Dallas (BUMC) is a nationally recognized hospital that cares for more than 300,000 people each year. Home to more than 20 specialty centers that are designed to treat a range of medical conditions, the hospital is a major patient care, teaching and research center for the southwest with 1,025 licensed beds, which means a lot of people to alert and potentially move in case of an emergency.

Because a university medical center has unique notification requirements that include mass casualty incidents, medical “code” alerts, personnel recall and delayed openings, employing a network-centric mass notification system is important to reach personnel seamlessly and rapidly for their safety, the safety of patients and to enhance physical security.

BUMC’s mass notification system is able to reach thousands of people quickly, capture responses and automatically generate personnel status reports in minutes. BUMC is using desktop alerts to notify physicians, nurses and medical personnel about the status of the hospital’s main patient record system. For example, alerts can be sent that the patient record system is going to be offline for maintenance and when the system is experiencing outages at various facilities.

Via network-centric emergency mass notification, BUMC is able to ensure:

Staff Protection– Mass dissemination of alerts to personnel to accelerate threat response

Personnel Accountability– Receive feedback on alerts to know status of recipient during a crisis

Accurate and Secure Contact Information– Deployed behind the firewall and integrated with existing data sources to ensure personnel contact information is accurate and secure

Edgar is Director of Operations-Federal Civilian at AtHoc, San Mateo, Calif.

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