On A Wing And A Prayer
Security a vital component of helicopter service facilities
- By Scott McNulty
- Jun 01, 2013
Newfoundland and Labrador-based commercial service provider
Cougar Helicopters doesn’t take safety and security lightly. Operating
a helicopter service in the midst of some of the world’s
most challenging weather has developed several strengths in
Cougar Helicopters. Proactive safety, flexibility and innovation
have become watchwords for Cougar’s experienced team of flight crew, aircraft
maintenance engineers, rescue specialists and support staff.
These strengths have come into play in support of Canada’s first offshore oil
production and in pioneering new methods and equipment for marine search and
rescue (SAR). Every new contract is a challenge to do old things new ways—to
continually improve every standard and every area of service—always with a safety-
first approach.
Incorporated in 1984 in Nova Scotia, Cougar Helicopters began operations
shuttling passengers between the airport and downtown Halifax. A lot has
changed since that time. The company entered the offshore oil and gas industry in
1990 with a support contract in Gijon, Spain, and later that same year returned
to Nova Scotia to begin flying for the oil industry in Atlantic Canada. With the
signing of the Hibernia Management and Development Corporation (HMDC)
contract in 1995, operations began off the coast of Newfoundland and Labrador.
Shortly thereafter, construction began on Cougar’s new corporate headquarters
with a 37,000-square-foot, passenger handling facility and hangar at St. John’s
International Airport.
In 2010 Cougar constructed a similar 28,000-square-foot heliport in Halifax
to support its offshore oil and gas customers in Nova Scotia and most recently
in 2012, construction was completed on a 27,000-square-foot, built-for-purpose
search and rescue (SAR) facility also located at St. John’s International Airport.
Beyond ensuring in-flight safety while successfully transporting hundreds of
offshore oil and gas workers each year, all of whom must wear a special helicopter
coldwater immersion suit, Cougar needed to provide security for its new facility
in Halifax and its SAR facility in St. John’s while ensuring complete network capability with its headquarters. Cougar’s facilities needed to follow Transport
Canada Aviation Regulations, which details security requirements for airports
frequented by the general public.
A New Beginning
As Cougar began to build its new terminal in Halifax, company officials knew
they had to take a top-notch approach with its security. The facility would ultimately
house a helicopter hangar and a passenger screening and boarding area
within a single structure. In addition, the terminal would also include a pilot
lounge and an office for Cougar Helicopters’ employees, similar to that of its
corporate headquarters in St. John’s.
Paramount to the newly constructed terminal in Halifax and the SAR facility
in St. John’s was the requirement to network the location with the operational
control center (OCC) located within the corporate headquarters. OCC
dispatches and follows all of Cougar’s aircraft throughout the world and provides
oversight for all of its security operations.
Cougar Helicopters relied on the expertise of systems integrator Northeastern
Protection Service Inc., in Dartmouth, Nova Scotia, and started working
with the integrator during the blueprint stage of the project. This approach
enabled Northeastern Protection and Cougar Helicopters to collaborate on the
design and implementation of an IP-based surveillance system and an access
control system that fully integrates with the building’s intrusion system.
“Starting from scratch gave us the flexibility to efficiently implement the different
security systems we needed,” said Richard Dawe, information systems
manager for Cougar Helicopters. “The design of the system wasn’t inhibited
by drywall being up or ceilings being intact. And, we weren’t tearing out walls
and moving doors.”
Roger Miller, vice president of operations for Northeastern Protection,
and Bryan Robinson, technical services manager, for Northeastern Protection,
worked closely with Cougar Helicopters to design and install the security system
at both its new Halifax location and the SAR building.
“Integration was critical to this project,” Miller said. “Cougar Helicopters
wanted to manage their access control, surveillance and security system
through a single interface.”
To accomplish a truly integrated, network-based system, Cougar Helicopters’
IT department and Northeastern Protection had to implement an independent
and parallel LAN network for both Halifax and the SAR building in St. John’s to
eliminate concerns of bandwidth issues and to identify IP addresses for its IP surveillance
cameras. The project took planning and communication between both
organizations, including the commitment of Cougar Helicopters to provide two
IT people onsite during the critical installation portion of the project.
“We had to work closely with the IT department because they were responsible
for obtaining the static IP address, making sure the ports were open, and
limiting access of the security system from other parties on the network,”
Robinson said.
Get the Ball Rolling
To take an integrated approach, Cougar
Helicopters selected several solutions
from Tyco Security Products, with the
Kantech EntraPass Corporate Edition
software as its security management
platform. The network and Web-ready
security management system fully integrates
with the other security systems
installed in the Cougar Helicopters’
terminal, including an HDVR Hybrid
Video Recorder from American Dynamics
and a DSC PowerSeries Alarm
Panel for the intrusion system.
The capabilities of EntraPass allow
Cougar Helicopters to integrate its access
control data with both its video
and intrusion systems. As a result,
EntraPass can search events that have
been generated by the DSC PowerSeries
system. This functionality provides
their IT department in St. John’s with
the ability to gather this data from one
workstation without going to multiple
sources. The speed, accuracy and ease
of use create a very efficient investigation
process.
“The foundation provided by the
Kantech EntraPass system in Halifax
can carry Cougar Helicopters through
any new building project they do elsewhere,”
Miller said. “They don’t need
to buy new software to add another
facility or to expand the capabilities of
the current system.”
In addition, EntraPass, coupled
with KT400 door controllers, manages
access for controlled entry points, such
as the hangar, pilot’s lounge and general
entry into the Halifax facility and
new SAR building.
Cougar Helicopters recently added a
new functionality to its system to provide
added safety measures for employees. As
an employee enters a designated area in
the Halifax building or SAR facility, the
system is programmed to begin a countdown
process, so if an employee does not leave within a specified timeframe
the system generates an alarm to create
a response process ensuring employees
are protected at all times.
The surveillance system took a hybrid
approach, with 16 analog ports
on the DVR and eight IP ports. The
software is providing the interface
with both the video and access control
system. This approach enables the facility
to add more analog or IP megapixel
cameras as needed. By integrating
an HDVR hybrid video recorder
with EntraPass, select personnel for
Cougar Helicopters can receive a video
clip by email each time someone
presents their proximity card to enter
the facility.
For Cougar Helicopters, an integrated
and networked surveillance system
goes beyond security to enable it to
manage day-to-day business activities.
“Management wants to see where
our aircraft are all the time; with our remote
monitoring video system, we can
view the hangar from anywhere in the
world,” Dawe said. “We can look at the
activity in the building in Halifax, St.
John’s and pilots can see that the passengers
are ready to go and they have
their suits on, and they can have an eye
on the activity of the building.”
The cameras also provide operational
efficiencies at the facility level. The
pilot’s lounges at Cougar Helicopters’
facilities are equipped with a large video
screen that enables pilots to remotely
view the hangar and see their helicopters
being rolled out onto the ramp and
prepared for flight.
The advantages of remote access are
not limited to the video portions of the
system. Having the ability to control
and manage doors from a central location
through the system also provides
Cougar with operational advantages.
“We can lock down the building,
we can open up doors and manage it
remotely,” Dawe said. “We always have
someone who can take control because
we have an IT team in St. John’s to
manage our facilities.”
At the newly built SAR facility in
St. John’s, Cougar incorporated the
Kantech integration platform installed
in Halifax. Following the standard developed
for Halifax, the SAR facility
became an added site on Kantech EntraPass,
which allows it to be managed
from the same IT infrastructure.
With its operations continuing to
grow, Cougar Helicopters has the capabilities
now to update its security
company-wide, thanks to the work of
Northeastern Protection and the Kantech
EntraPass platform.
“We were excited to have been the
integrator for their initial requirement
in Halifax with Cougar Helicopters,”
Miller said. “And, we have been equally
excited about expanding our relationship
with Cougar as they have continued
to grow.”
This article originally appeared in the June 2013 issue of Security Today.