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© 2001 National Burglar & Fire Alarm Association 10- 1 Chapter 10 The Central Station –24 hour /7day Operation –Receive Signals –Process Signals –React.

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Presentation on theme: "© 2001 National Burglar & Fire Alarm Association 10- 1 Chapter 10 The Central Station –24 hour /7day Operation –Receive Signals –Process Signals –React."— Presentation transcript:

1 © 2001 National Burglar & Fire Alarm Association 10- 1 Chapter 10 The Central Station –24 hour /7day Operation –Receive Signals –Process Signals –React to Signals –Alert Authorities Alarms: The First Line of Defense

2 © 2001 National Burglar & Fire Alarm Association 10- 2 Monitoring Options Central Stations Certified Central Stations Proprietary Police Department Answering Service

3 © 2001 National Burglar & Fire Alarm Association 10- 3 The Central Station Is a secure location dedicated to the receipt of alarm signals & swift precise reaction to those signals. As the term is used in the industry, a Central Station is a professional monitoring station which may or may not meet all the requirements of a Certified Central Station.

4 © 2001 National Burglar & Fire Alarm Association 10- 4 Central Station The primary responsibility of the Central Station to its customers is to pass along all signals to the proper authorities and/or the customer representatives.

5 © 2001 National Burglar & Fire Alarm Association 10- 5 Central Station Functions Reading & Interpreting Signals –Which Customer? –What Type? Dispatching the Authorities –Police, Fire, Other?

6 © 2001 National Burglar & Fire Alarm Association 10- 6 Central Station Functions Customer Notifications Documentation & Record Keeping –Accurate Records –Each & Every Action

7 © 2001 National Burglar & Fire Alarm Association 10- 7 What Happens to the Signals at the Central? Direct Link to Computer Automation System Handled Manually By Operator Ln 4 1234-5 Alarm System Receiving Equipment

8 © 2001 National Burglar & Fire Alarm Association 10- 8 Manual Systems

9 © 2001 National Burglar & Fire Alarm Association 10- 9 Automated or Computerized Systems Ln 4 1234-5 Alarm System Receiving Equipment Direct Link to Computer Automation System Ln 4 1234-5 = Jones Residence Burglary Front Door 1234- Jones Residence Burglary Front Door 2345- ACME Valves Opening Signal Scroll Screen

10 © 2001 National Burglar & Fire Alarm Association 10- 10 Signal Processing

11 © 2001 National Burglar & Fire Alarm Association 10- 11 General Signal Types Process or Condition Fire Holdup- Emergency Burglary

12 © 2001 National Burglar & Fire Alarm Association 10- 12 Common Signals AC Power Failure Communications Failure Low Battery Restore Supervisory Test Fail to Test Trouble

13 © 2001 National Burglar & Fire Alarm Association 10- 13 Opening & Closing Signals Opening –System has been disarmed –Site is now OPEN for business –Scheduled Openings Closing –System has been armed –Site is now Closed.

14 © 2001 National Burglar & Fire Alarm Association 10- 14 Entry/Exit Alarms Indicates an alarm that is detected shortly after arming or before disarming the system –Used to reduce false dispatches.

15 © 2001 National Burglar & Fire Alarm Association 10- 15 Responses Vary Immediate Response –Burglary –Fire –Holdup/Panic/Emergency/Ambush/Duress –Medical “Autologged” Signals –Open-Close

16 © 2001 National Burglar & Fire Alarm Association 10- 16 CSAA False Alarm Study Monitored Systems Reduce Police Dispatches! They filter unnecessary signals Activations = 160,925 1783 Requests for Police Dispatch =

17 © 2001 National Burglar & Fire Alarm Association 10- 17 Steps Taken By Operator Prior To Dispatching View Previous Activity –Avoid Multiple Dispatching Read Comments on file –Permanent –Temporary

18 © 2001 National Burglar & Fire Alarm Association 10- 18 Alarm Verification Used to reduce false alarms. –Call premise before dispatch –Audio listen-in feature through control –Check video camera over phone line

19 © 2001 National Burglar & Fire Alarm Association 10- 19 Alarm Verification Chart

20 © 2001 National Burglar & Fire Alarm Association 10- 20 Passcard, Codes, & Passwords A password, passcode, ID number or secret code to identify who is authorized to cancel alarms, conduct tests, & to arm & disarm the system. Could be a card or a customer selected a number or word code. Often different from the code used to turn the system on & off.

21 © 2001 National Burglar & Fire Alarm Association 10- 21 Abort or Cancel Signal An authorized user has cancelled the alarm. –an authorized user can enter his/her code to disarm the system & send an abort signal. –commonly verified by calling –all systems should be programmed to send abort signals.

22 © 2001 National Burglar & Fire Alarm Association 10- 22 Alarm Notification The central station operator notifies one or more of the following: –the first person that can be reached on the subscribers call list –guard response –special conditions notification (e.g. low temperature - heating contractor) Central station calls until someone is reached. Responsible parties should meet police officers at the alarm site.

23 © 2001 National Burglar & Fire Alarm Association 10- 23 Voice Recorders Nearly all Central Stations record calls that include digital or verifiable time stamps: –Check operators actions W/Customer W/Police –Can be used to correlate dispatch times

24 © 2001 National Burglar & Fire Alarm Association 10- 24 Alarms: The First Line of Defense 1- Introduction 2- What is an Alarm System 3- What is A False Dispatch 4- Impact of False Dispatches 5- Causes of False Dispatches 6- Preventing False Dispatches 7- User Controls 8- Sensors 9- The Control 10- The Central Station 11- How Authorities Respond 12- What to expect for Alarm Co.s 13- The Alarm Ordinance 14- Sources of Information 15- Site Survey 5 Minute Break 10 Minute Break 60 Minute Lunch 30 Minute Lunch Next Chapter


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