Full-Service Security
Florida sheriff ’s department takes lead with storage
- By Lee Caswell
- Mar 01, 2011
The Hillsborough County Sheriff ’s
office (HSCO) in Tampa, Fla., is
a full-service law enforcement
agency comprising more than
3,400 employees. Leadership and officers
value integrity, professionalism and
community-oriented policing as the top
priorities of agency operations. Today,
HCSO, led by Sheriff David Gee, is one of
fewer than 20 public safety agencies in the
nation to attain law enforcement, jail and
medical accreditation.
The city of Tampa faced particularly high
crime rates in a two-square-mile community
adjacent to the University of South Florida
campus, where the sheriff ’s office struggled
to control criminal activity, including illicit
drug sales and prostitution. Residents
complained that they were afraid to be
outside in these areas, and the department
knew it had to make a change.
So HCSO reached out to the city of
Chicago to research the benefits of its
public surveillance system. After reviewing
Chicago’s crime-reduction statistics through
the use of overt video surveillance, the
sheriff ’s office applied for a $1 million federal
grant to fund a municipal surveillance project
that would provide a visible, identifiable
deterrent to crime while improving safety for
area residents.
“The goal is to increase safety in highcrime
areas,” said Craig McEntyre, manager
of the business support bureau for HSCO’s
Information Services division. “The sheriff ’s
office feels video surveillance is a powerful
investigative tool as well as a visible
deterrent.” McEntyre, who has experience
in video surveillance projects in the private
sector, handled the implementation of the
system before handing daily operational
control to the district.
He tapped SiteSecure, a systems
integration firm based in Sanford, Fla.,
along with Avrio RMS, a surveillance
integrator with experience with the
Chicago installation, to develop a system
that would meet the goals and the budget
the sheriff’s office laid out. The proposed
system was a state-of-the-art wireless
surveillance system that funneled video
data back to district headquarters without
requiring expensive cabling.
The sheriff ’s office selected the proposal
due to its value, innovation and the team’s
expertise in municipal surveillance. The
deployment began in January 2010, with the
installation of 20 Avrio portable overt digital
surveillance systems cameras. A Firetide
wireless mesh network provides streetlevel
communication, and robust Motorola
backhaul links connect the local system back
to headquarters.
Video management software from
Genetec manages incoming video streams,
while Pivot3 Scale-out Surveillance
CloudBanks provide a flexible storage and
server platform. Flexibility was important
not just for vendor equipment but also
for the implementation team, which
had to adapt its plans quickly during the
deployment. For example, the original plan
called for installing cameras on existing
utility poles, explained Craig Bowman, the
division manager of SiteSecure. However,
new concrete poles had to be installed when
they discovered that the existing poles
could not be used because of local utility
regulations. The experienced integration
team was able to address this challenge
head-on and kept the project on time and
within budget.
The camera project is called “Eye On
Crime” because the cameras allow deputies
to keep an eye on trouble spots, monitor
streets for emergency situations and give
residents an increased feeling of safety. The
20 cameras are located at strategic locations
in an area bordered by Bearss Avenue,
Fowler Avenue, Bruce B. Downs Boulevard
and Nebraska Avenue.
HCSO chose the Pivot3 Scale-Out
Surveillance CloudBanks both to store
captured video images and to host the
VMS software. The scale-out nature of the
Pivot3 solution ensures that the system’s
performance and capacity can handle the
demands of incoming video streams and
offers investment protection over time as the
deployment grows.
The amount of storage capacity necessary
for surveillance video is a major budget item
in a surveillance installation, as cameras
can generate 1 TB of data in one day. A
scale-out system such as Pivot3’s allow
users the flexibility to start with as much or
as little storage as they want, and then add
capacity and performance simply by adding
appliances, which can be done without
disruption.
The Pivot3 CloudBanks also reduce cost
by consolidating server and shared storage
functionality in a common appliance. Pivot3
CloudBank appliances deliver both server
and shared storage resources in one, and they
provide application failover that protects both
storage and VMS applications in the event of
a failure. Hosting servers in an iSCSI SAN
eliminates the need for standalone physical
servers, which results in 40 percent reductions
in power, cooling, rack space and cost.
“Pivot3 is more efficient than traditional
storage solutions. HCSO needs to capture
critical surveillance data at all times,
and Pivot3 provides application failover
to prevent the loss of captured video,”
McEntyre said. “Furthermore, the fact that
server applications share storage hardware
resources reduces our overall power and
cooling costs, which makes the platform very
cost effective.”
Deputies at the Patrol District I
headquarters monitor the wireless cameras.
Video is recorded 24 hours a day, seven days
a week, and surveillance footage is stored
for a pre-defined amount of time. This gives
deputies the opportunity to review data from
previous days or weeks for investigative
purposes.
For HCSO, the new system delivered real
and immediate benefits.
“We have some very tangible results
in terms of drug busts and criminal
identification, where one burglar the police
were investigating for years was finally
apprehended,” McEntyre said. “We also
found that the system has been pivotal
in changing criminal behavior in hotbed
areas, which helps us extend the reach of
our officers.”
Furthermore, residents feel safer and are
grateful that the police focused on reducing
crime in hotbed areas.
The sheriff ’s office envisions increasing
the number of cameras to 200, but it must
move through another grant process to see it
can secure funding. The surveillance system
was designed to be portable and easily
expandable to enable police to move the
equipment to other crime hot spots or add
more cameras to the network. Furthermore,
the scale-out nature of the Pivot3 solution
enables HCSO to expand its storage and
server infrastructure easily so that it can
meet new requirements without having to
re-design the existing infrastructure.
This article originally appeared in the March 2011 issue of Security Today.