1 / 16

ALARMS:

ALARMS:. The First Line of Defense. Chapter 1. Who uses alarm systems? Why are they important?. Alarms: The First Line of Defense. Who Uses Alarms Systems?. Residential Single Family Homes Condominiums Apartments Commercial Small Business Owners Commercial-Retail Industrial.

melangell
Télécharger la présentation

ALARMS:

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. ALARMS: The First Line of Defense © 1999 National Burglar & Fire Alarm Association 1-1

  2. Chapter 1 • Who uses alarm systems? • Why are they important? Alarms: The First Line of Defense © 1999 National Burglar & Fire Alarm Association 1-2

  3. Who Uses Alarms Systems? Residential • Single Family Homes • Condominiums • Apartments Commercial • Small Business Owners • Commercial-Retail • Industrial © 1999 National Burglar & Fire Alarm Association 1-3

  4. Alarm Systems OurFirst Line of Defense • Why People Install Burglar & Fire Alarms • As a Deterrent • Burglaries • Vandalism • Robberies • Protects Lives & Property • Criminals • Fire • Medical • Environmental © 1999 National Burglar & Fire Alarm Association 1-4

  5. Alarm Systems The First Line of Defense Why People Install Burglar & Fire Alarms • Provides Peace of Mind • Home & Business • Children Home Alone • Elderly © 1999 National Burglar & Fire Alarm Association 1-5

  6. Do Alarm Systems Really Work? • Various studies show that homes and business with alarm systems are 6 to 10 times less likely to experience break ins! • These studies also show that alarms significantly reduce the dollars loss from burglaries • No statistics can account for the “Peace of Mind” that alarm systems provide. It is immeasurable. © 1999 National Burglar & Fire Alarm Association 1-6

  7. Burglaries In the U.S. In Millions Department of Justice - FBI-Uniform Crime Reports © 1999 National Burglar & Fire Alarm Association 1-7

  8. Crime Concern High • Percentage of homeowners more concerned about security now vs. 5 years ago: • West 61% • Midwest 65% • South 73% • Northeast 63% Source: Electronic Living @ Home’ Parks Associates 1998 © 1999 National Burglar & Fire Alarm Association 1-8

  9. Alarm Systems Do Work! Homes Without Alarms AreHit 3 to 1 Homes Burglarized % “The Effectiveness of Burglar Alarms” Hakim & Buck 1991 © 1999 National Burglar & Fire Alarm Association 1-9

  10. Alarms Are Effective Police initiated studies determined; • residences with alarm systems were 6 times less likely to be burglarized than homes without systems. • burglary rate for alarmed business premises was one-half that of non alarmed businesses. The Hallcrest Report II, Private Security Trends 1970-2000 © 1999 National Burglar & Fire Alarm Association 1-10

  11. Alarm Systems Reduce Commercial Burglaries! 619 1240 1993 Annual Number of Victims Portland Police 1993 © 1999 National Burglar & Fire Alarm Association 1-11

  12. Not Satisfied 6% Satisfied 94% Most Alarm Owners Are Happy Customers “The Effectiveness of Burglar Alarms” Hakim & Buck 1991 © 1999 National Burglar & Fire Alarm Association 1-12

  13. Alarm Systems Cut Commercial Burglaries & Loss! Number of victims Portland Police 1993 © 1999 National Burglar & Fire Alarm Association 1-13

  14. Alarms Reduce $ Loss From Residential Burglary $104,979 Have Alarms Don’t Have Alarms $5,878,103 Portland Police, 1993 © 1999 National Burglar & Fire Alarm Association 1-14

  15. Alarmed Locations Save Public $Incidents per 100,000 Alarmed Locations ALARMED 952 Burglaries @ $835 per loss $ 794,920 Cost of Response @$42.85 per call $4,285,000 41 Assaults 4 Rapes ==================== Total Cost $5,079,920 UNALARMED 7,162 Burglaries @ $1,610 per loss $11,530,884 Cost of Investigation @ $151 minimum/call $1,128,876 285 Assaults 29 Rapes ===================== Total Cost $12,659,760 Savings to taxpayers per 100,000 alarmed locations = $7,579,840 If all 440,000 Dallas homes & businesses alarmed, savings = $33,351,296 Source : City of Dallas, U.S. Justice Dept., Portland Police Bureau © 1999 National Burglar & Fire Alarm Association 1-15

  16. 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 Alarms: The First Line of Defense Next Chapter 5 Minute Break 10 Minute Break 30 Minute Lunch 60 Minute Lunch © 1999 National Burglar & Fire Alarm Association 1-16

More Related