Guarding the Games
        Biometrics already lending a hand for 2012 London Olympics
        
        
			- By Jon Mooney
- Mar 18, 2008
Construction sites are fiercely
  regulated environments in
  the United Kingdom, under
  a program called the
  Construction Skills Certification Scheme.
  At these sites, CSCS accreditation is tied to
  employee biometric details. At many construction
  sites, only workers with a CSCS
  card can be employed. The Olympic venues
  in London fall into this group.
 “Munich changed everything,” said
  Larry Buendorf, chief security officer for
  the United States Olympic Committee for
  the past 14 years and, previously, a 21-year
  veteran with the Secret Service. “As each
  security incident occurs in this world, it
  changes how you go about your regular,
  day-to-day business. You use these security
  incidents as a learning tool.”
 Evolving Standards 
  
  The use of biometrics has grown with each
  successive Olympic Games. After protecting
  athletes at the 1984 Los Angeles
  games, hand geometry readers have been a
  feature of access control at subsequent
  Olympic Games. In previous Olympics,
  athletes and others with official credentials
  were given identification badges with bar
  codes. Badge-swapping was common—
  while the authenticity of the badge could
  be verified, there was no way to tell if the
  person wearing it was the one to whom it
was issued. 
  
    | Biometrics Keep Tabs
      On Workers at Asian
      Construction Site  Solution Expert Technology of Hong Kong
          implemented a biometric-based system
          using 90 hand readers to control access to
          all six entrances at a construction site that
          has become the Venetian Macao, the anchor
          of a Las Vegas-style strip in Asia.  “Protecting projects from theft and keeping
        people from getting hurt on construction
        sites are always a top concern,” said Tony
        Yuen, COO of Solution Expert Technology. “In
        Macao, strict labor and safety laws that prevent
        illegal workers and workers without
        safety training from entering construction
        sites make strict access control even more
        urgent. General contractors who violate
        these laws receive heavy penalties when
        they are caught.”  According to Yuen, contractors are
        increasingly turning to biometric hand geometry
        technology to help them quickly give
        access to authorized workers and accurately
        deny entry to people who should not be
        on-site. With hand readers, a worker’s permit
        and safety training records, along with expiration
        dates, can be entered into a database
        that not only verifies an employee’s identity,
        but instantly checks to see if that employee is
        authorized to be there.  At the Venetian Macao, the site was so big
        that there were concerns that cables would
        be consistently cut. So data was sent wirelessly,
        using an 802.11 wireless router.
        Solution Expert Technology has written
        time and attendance software for both
        Chinese and English users that interfaces
        seamlessly with the hand readers. Similar
        systems are used at more than 100 construction
        sites operated by several of the largest
        construction companies in Hong Kong.
        At the Venetian Macao site, turnstiles
        were posted at each entrance. Officials created
        a dual system with hand reader terminals
        on both sides, allowing the same turnstile
        to be used by workers either entering or
        exiting a site. A contactless smart card, typically
        kept in a hip pocket, called up a stored
        biometric template, which then was immediately
        validated by the employee’s hand on the
        hand reader terminal.  Timekeeping information for the employee
        instantly was transmitted to a central office
        wirelessly. Everyone entering the site, from
        employees to outside subcontractors and
        vendors, was required to use the hand readers
        for access.  The hand readers themselves were protected
        by weatherproof stainless steel housings
        equipped with red and green indicator
        lights. One set of battery-powered turnstiles
        could serve up to 300 workers who entered
        and exited the site up to six times a day. That
        meant one set of turnstiles could handle 1,800
        transactions per day while still quickly and
        efficiently providing both timekeeping and
        access control functions.  “The portability of our solutions is a key
        selling point,” Yuen said. “Site entrances are
        temporary and often moved every three to
        four weeks. Our turnstile solutions are made
        to be easily towed from entrance to entrance
        and site-to-site.  “With the hand reader turnstiles, the construction
        company can now directly pay all
        workers, whether they have been hired by
        subcontractors or not, eliminating potential
        contract disputes and giving construction
        companies greater control over their budgets.
        They also have daily access to accurate
        reports about overall payroll costs. The hand
        reader terminals also ensure that every person
        entering a construction site holds a valid
        safety card and has completed an eight-hour
        mandatory safety training class.” | 
By the time the 1996 Atlanta games
  ended, hand geometry tracked 65,000 people,
  providing more than 1 million transactions
  in 28 days. It also secured the athletes’
  dormitories at Georgia Tech. That
  Olympics was the first wide-scale deployment
  of ID cards linked to hand geometry
  readers through radio frequencies. Each
  card contained a chip that stored an ID
  number and a digital template of the person’s
  hand to whom the badge was issued.
  As a person approached high-security
  access points, such as those into the
  Olympic Village, the RF chip transmitted
  the image and number. A computer recorded
  the number so the person’s entry and
  exit could be tracked.
 Meanwhile, the person placed a hand on
  a hand geometry reader that compared a 3-
  D geometric image of the hand with the
  image sent by the ID card. If the two didn’t
  match, access was denied. The process
  took only a few seconds.
 Since then, however, terrorists have
  become more sophisticated. For instance,
  in 2004, a bomb that exploded during a
  parade killed the president of Chechnya.
  The device had been planted well in
  advance of the event.
 Knowing that terrorists can plan ahead,
  the biometrics used in Atlanta already are
  being used in London—at construction
  sites creating the 2012 London games venues.
  However, in the United Kingdom,
  most of these Olympic construction sites
  would probably be protected in the same
  way—even if they weren’t being planned
  for the games. In other words, security has
  commenced more than five years before
  the games themselves actually begin, but
  in a de facto way. That’s because these are
  not the only construction sites in the
  United Kingdom using hand geometry.
 An Outdated System 
  
  Many might not be aware that the construction
  industry within the United
  Kingdom is the country’s single largest
  employer, with more than 2.2 million
  employees. While the industry is rapidly
  growing, it continues to suffer from poor
  access control at construction sites, litigation
  costs of health and safety violations,
  buddy-punching and overcharging by contractors.
  At any given time, major construction companies have multiple construction
  sites with a large number of
  stakeholders involved in construction and
development work.
 To maintain adequate security, access to
  the sites historically has been granted using
  a card-based system. Security officers
  would verify the credentials of employees
  against their cards and make manual
  entries into the register. Gaining access to
  the construction site was a laborious
  process, and unsupervised access using
  smart cards allowed workers to clock in
  and out for each other.
 The large number of stakeholders made
  it difficult for project managers to control
  access to sites, know who was on-site and
  determine if they had the necessary credentials
  to be there. As a consequence, there
  was the potential of site security being
  compromised, unnecessary overheads due
  to litigation costs on health and safety violations,
  buddy-punching and incorrect payments
  to contractors.
 The industry turned to Human
  Recognition Systems, a privately held UK
  company based in Liverpool that specializes
  in developing and delivering solutions
  that identify people and their behaviors.
  Established in 2002, HRS is recognized by
  industry experts as a leading biometric,
  identity management consulting and system
  integration company. The firm’s biometric
  information management system
  incorporates biometrics with management
  software platforms, allowing managers in
  the construction industry to perform a variety
  of functions specifically designed to
  address key industry concerns regarding
  health and safety details, CSCS accreditation,
  site access and report generation.
 Minimizing Ghost Working 
  
  “  The adoption of biometric technology by
  construction firms delivers many key benefits
  by positively proving the identity of
  individuals on site, and it eliminates the
  potential for ghost working, a longstanding
  issue within the industry,” said Lee Hannis,
  business development manager at HRS.
  Ghost working is the practice of registering
multiple identities on a site.
 Employees often ghost work by using their
  friends and colleagues to use a swipe or
  proximity card, which does not necessarily
  guarantee the presence of an individual onsite—
  only that their card has turned up for
  work. By using a biometric reader to control
  access and egress from a site, a construction
  company can maintain control of
  its cost base and only pay people who actually
  turn up.
 “We are delighted to see this kind of
  real value being delivered to the businesses
  we work with,” Hannis said. “Our
  approach to all biometric projects is to
  identify the business requirements and only
  integrate biometrics if true value can be
  derived from the system.”
 Of course, ghost workers could just as
  well be people with bad intentions. Today,
  access to many construction sites, including
  those that will be Olympic venues, is
  granted by verifying the credentials of
  employees against their biometric hand
  geometry templates. Upon hiring, the
  worker is enrolled in the system by placing
  a hand onto the platen of the hand reader
  and being provided with a PIN. Then, to
  enter the work site, the worker simply
  enters the PIN on the keyboard of the hand
  geometry unit and then places a hand on
  the reader’s plate. If the hand matches the
  template from the system, the worker is
  allowed to enter. Each transaction is
  recorded by the system and provides project
  managers with accurate information on
  the number of workers on-site, duration of
  stay and other information.
“This is a really exciting development
  for us, and rarely before have we seen such
  a compelling fit of biometric technology to
  a specific industry problem. With such outstanding
  benefits, we certainly expect to
  see many more implementations of this
  type in the future,” said Simon Appleton,
security solutions manager.
 An Early Adopter 
  
  One of the United Kingdom’s largest construction
  companies, Carillion, was among
  the first to use the new system, recognizing
  an increasing need to maintain and
  improve health and safety standards on
  building sites. With 17,000 employees,
  Carillion provides a broad range of business,
  transport and construction services to
  commercial and public sector clients in the
  United Kingdom, France, Sweden, Canada
and the Middle East.
 Their previous systems using swipe
  card technology were flawed, only reporting
  a card’s presence on-site, not that of an
  actual person. Further problems also were
  encountered with poor reliability of equipment
  in wet and dusty conditions. The
  technology must often withstand harsh outdoor
  conditions and changeable biometrics
  due to scarring, burns or dirt. These obstacles
  have been overcome with outdoor biometric
  readers, an application in which
  hand geometry readers excel. And now, at
  the touch of a button, Carillion site managers
  and other contractors using the system
  can print a list of exactly who is present
  at an emergency or site evacuation.
 “The selection of the biometric is crucial
  in these conditions,” Hannis said. “It is
  our job to make sure that 2,000-plus construction
  workers trying to get home after a
  long day can leave the site without unnecessary
  delay.”
 From use as a security tool at the
  Olympics to a method of monitoring construction
  worker access in the United
  Kingdom, biometric hand reader technology
  clearly is a wave of the future for the
  security industry.