Remote Security Camera Monitoring
Solutions for Almost Any Location
Apartment Complexes
Bank Lobbies
Shopping Centers
Parking Lots
Schools and Campus
Communities
Construction Sites
Restaurants
Gated Residential Communities
Farm & Ranches
Convenience Stores
Warehouses
Mines & Quarries
Government & Municipalities
Residential
Rental Property
Small Retail Businesses
Sports Venues
Churches
Any Location You Want To Monitor Without Using a Security Guard
Overcoming existing infrastructure obstacles. The Problem:
In order to comply with high crime area concerns; a multi-tenant community management company in the Sacramento, California area was required to provide video surveillance of specified ed common areas for several communities. The common areas included swimming pools, learning centers, and entrances or exits. The topography of every community was unique; each having a variety of obstacles between where a camera location was required and a central location (office) for recording. The trenching required to run wire to each camera would cost thousand of dollars but the budget for each project would not cover the cost.
The Solution:
To overcome the need for trenching, Remote Monitoring Technologies utilized advanced Mobotix IP-based cameras with wireless MESH technology to seamlessly integrate with wired devices. Each rugged, yet attractive high resolution camera has onboard two-way audio, motion detection and alert management with redundant data archiving capability onsite and offsite.
Conclusions:
Remote Monitoring Technologies specializes in powerful, sophisticated web-based solutions for proactive multi-site remote community management. Multiple-use devices enabled on the standards based TCP/IP infrastructure can improve ROI. Save money on unnecessary travel between properties; experience live synchronized audio /video conferences with the click of a mouse.
The possibilities are endless: converse via any camera, turn on lights, open doors or gates, check weather conditions. Mobotix cameras offer a hedge against obsolesce with a future-ready solution. Whether your camera network consists of one camera or thousands; enterprise scalability allows the system to grow with need.
While software is not required to access the camera network; MxControl Center software is available allowing every camera installed at any community in the world to be managed locally from a community office as well as corporate headquarters miles away. Remote administration allows live secure access to the camera network. A community may share camera data with authorized personnel, courtesy patrols, local law enforcement or even contract with 3rd party surveillance and access control monitoring companies. On-site personnel may access the wireless MESH network for connectivity via notebook PC’s, PDA’s or cell phone.
UPDATE: Remote Monitoring Technologies has the solution for this problem, this customer and many like them...at work, right now, all over the U.S. Call now for details: 877-587-2679
DALLAS - Workers at Bradco Supply Corp. arrived one
morning to find someone severed the heavy chain
locks on the security fence at the Fort Worth shingle
supply warehouse. Inside, empty wooden pallets were
splintered and scattered across the floor.
They'd been robbed. Again.
Thieves have targeted Bradco Supply locations so
much in recent months that company officials decided
to add a unique splash of paint to the shingles'
packaging to help police track down the stolen
roofing material.
Crooks nationwide have been stealing millions of
dollars worth of shingles from companies this year, a
sizable increase from years past. Previously, thieves
would steal them from construction sites, but not on
this level. They're now getting ambitious, robbing
warehouses — sometimes several semi-truckloads at
a time — and hauling away hundreds of thousands of
dollars in shingles.
In Texas alone, at least $4 million
worth have been stolen this year.
"It's tremendously exasperating," said Barbara
Douglas of the Lumbermen's Association of Texas
and Louisiana. "Especially for the people that have
been hit more than once. It's like hitting them when
they're down because the building economy is so
slow. Retailers really can't take hits like this."
Investigators believe some thieves are part of an
organized operation, stockpiling the materials in
anticipation of hurricanes, tornadoes and other roofripping
storms that would heighten the demand for
their stolen wares. Other thefts may be isolated
incidents from people looking to sell the shingles to
roofers for a quick buck. Also, the soaring price of
shingles, which are petroleum-based products, has
driven the demand for cheaper, black-market roofing
material.
The thefts are forcing roofing companies to spend
thousands of dollars on security cameras, lighting
and closed-circuit television equipment. "All it's done is suck the energy out of us," said David
Larson, a vice president of DeSoto, Texas-based DW
Distribution, a building materials supplier that has
lost $60,000 worth of shingles this year to theft.
'Still out there'
No law enforcement agencies track the number of
shingle thefts nationwide. The Texas Department of
Public Safety is working with police and sheriff's
departments to stem the heists, said spokeswoman
Tela Mange. But every day, she said, the thefts — and
losses — continue to mount.
In July, masked thieves were caught on tape in Atlanta
sawing through ABC Supply Co.'s fenced-in
warehouse and then using the yard's forklift to load up a truck with shingles. Nearly $30,000 worth of materials were stolen and the thieves were never caught, said Bill Schuch, security chief for ABC Supply, one of the nation's largest roofing supply distributors.
"They're still out there, plying their trade," Schuch said. "They do it to everybody. They don't leave anyone out." Since then, ABC Supply has installed more security cameras and fences and added GPS equipment to its vehicles. Besides Atlanta, thieves have hit ABC Supply's locations in Florida, North Carolina, South Carolina, California, Oklahoma, Louisiana, Connecticut, Maryland and Texas, Schuch said.
Shingle thieves have also robbed several warehouses owned by Avenel, N.J.-based Bradco Supply. The Fort Worth theft in May left the warehouse ransacked and missing 10 semitrailer loads of shingles — worth a total of $120,000 and enough to cover approximately 65 homes of about 3,200 square feet each. In August, thieves hit Bradco's facility in Tulsa, Okla., and hauled away another $100,000 worth of shingles.
"It's almost like a chain of copycats at this point," said Charles Collins, Bradco's regional operations manager. "They figured the game out and now they're targeting us."
Other large roofing supply companies worry about being singled out. They've reported similar thefts to police, but company officials often don't want the public to know out of fear it would encourage more thefts or hurt the company's stock value, Schuch said.
Bradco has spent thousands of dollars to add paint to the packaging of its shingles to help track them down, and even though that's helped police identify the stolen goods once the thieves are nabbed, such measures add to the company's operational costs. "That (cost) has to be passed on," Collins said. "It gets passed to the contractor who then passes it to the homeowner."
'Too good to pass up'
Smaller companies worry such costs could put them out of business.
"How can a small lumberyard do that, especially in this economy?" asked Laddy Rejcek, a manager at Blazek Building Supply, which recently lost more than $100,000 worth of shingles to thieves at its two Texas stores in Waxahachie and Ennis.
The tough economy has helped fuel the thefts because stolen shingles are cheaper.
A roofer who buys his shingles from a reputable supplier would charge between $12,000 and $14,000 to roof a 3,200-square-foot home, said Schuch, the ABC Supply security chief. A thief may charge $7,500 for the same job. "A homeowner's gotta be thinking, 'You're kidding me. That's too good to pass up,'" he said.
UPDATE: Remote Monitoring Technologies has the solution for this problem, this customer and many like them...at work, right now, all over the U.S.
Call now for details: 877-587-2679
RMTcam IP-based remote activated audio-visual alert system
A Case for Audio
A neighbor's car was broken into and items stolen from it. Knowing we had a camera on our front yard, they asked if anything was captured by it. After a quick visual review of the archives; nothing looked out of the ordinary, so we decided to review the footage with audio. This is what was discovered. If you listen closely you can hear the distinctive sound the offender's vehicle makes; then at the end of this video, you can hear the car window being smashed.