Jumping Into the IP Campus
Largest Texas school district converting to latest security technology
- By Ralph C. Jensen
- June 01, 2019
Imagine, a campus security installation so big that it will take
years to complete all the work, and it also means installing
solutions with the latest technology and greatest impact to
school security.
This is the kind of job an integrator can really sink their teeth
into. It is the kind of solution that a manufacturer wants to keep on
their to-do list.
Houston Independent School District (HISD) is the largest school
district in Texas, and is the seventh largest school district in the United
States. The latest technology is about to make its debut in every
school. HISD has built 10 new schools within the district in 2018, and
it is expected to add another 10 to 12 this year, all of which will be
brought on board with new cabling and IP cameras. In all, there are
280 schools in the district.
“At HISD, safety of students and staff is always the top priority,”
district officials said. “All new campuses include HISD districtstandard
safety and security features, such as clearly delineated
main entrances, security vestibules with electronic access control
systems that all visitors must pass through, electronic access control
systems at frequently used exterior doors, and building compartmentalization
to control visitor movement, as well as comprehensive
intrusion detection systems with high definition closed circuit
television cameras, door sensors, motion detectors, alarms and
24-hour central monitoring.”
Making a Change
The change in security solutions will be significant as the district had
deployed upwards of 17,000 analog cameras at its schools. All cameras
were deployed with coax cable. The sign of the times had come
for retire the old system and update with what surrounding school
districts have been installing.
“We (Salient) have partnered with Houston ISD for their security
needs for more than a decade,” said Paul Fisher, vice president of
global key and national accounts at Salient Systems. “We have worked
with other nearby school districts in the Houston area, including
HISD. Our extensive experience will continue to guide HISD as they
build new schools and refurbish other facilities in the district.”
Fisher said the biggest difference with the new IP security installations will be implementation of Salient’s
Power Ultra hardware, which are intended
to replace an obsolete Windows XP, which
is no longer serviced by Microsoft. Power
Ultra is the new standard of storage from
the IT perspective.
“This hardware will allow HISD to grow
over the next five years and give them twice
as much horsepower than they currently
need,” Fisher said. “This is a major move to
IP video surveillance, and each server will
easily handle more than 200 IP cameras.”
Building schools and refurbishing the current
installed base at HISD is no easy task.
The district covers territory in nine municipalities
and some unincorporated areas in
Greater Houston, including all of the cities of
Bellaire, West University Place, Southside
Place, and most of the area within the Houston
city limits. HISD also takes students
from the Harris County portion of Missouri
City, a portion of Jacinto City, a small portion
of Hunters Creek Village, a small portion
of Piney Point Village, and a small portion
of Pearland; Pearland annexed territory
within HISD between 1998 and 2005. There
are more than 209,000 students, speaking
nearly 100 languages. There are nearly 12,000
teachers and nearly 28,000 support staff.
Recently Complete Schools
“Safety and security is part of the project
scope for all recently completed schools and
those currently under construction,” district
officials said. “This includes the 40 schools
that are part of the 2012 Bond Program, as
well as seven more schools, either recently
completed or under construction, that are
not funded by the 2012 Bond.”
Additionally, the 2012 Bond Program
includes a $17.3 million line item dedicated
to safety and security upgrades at schools
districtwide. That focus was further strengthened
in 2017, when the HISD Board of Education
allocated an additional $12.1 million
for districtwide safety and security needs.
“We are pleased to be a part of this safety
and security upgrade at HISD. Using Salient
technology at the headend of the security
systems says a lot about our open architecture,
and the trust that the school district has
placed in us,” Fisher said. “As we help HISD
move towards a total IP solution, we are also
pleased to work with the HISD IT department
and upgrade their network cabling.”
Not all HISD campuses fall under the
bond program. Many safety and security
upgrades are made based on a review of
assessed needs at various campuses. Most
upgrades are at elementary and middle
schools, because so many high schools have
been or will be replaced or rebuilt with the
district-standard safety and security measures
already incorporated.
“The upgrades have been completed partially
in-house and partially by contracting
with construction, technology and security
vendors,” district officials said. “In regards to
wire pulls, all new campuses have robust
fiber optic and wire backbones, minimizing
the need for new wire pulls. For upgrades at
existing campuses, the amount of wiring
needed and pull times will vary.”
While Salient System’s VMS has been in
place throughout their decades-long security
contract, the company’s technology team has
been working hand-in-hand with HISD’s
Information Technology division with the
installation of the Power Ultra in new
schools, while Security Maintenance, a team
under the purview of the Business Operations
Facilities and Fleet Services Department,
is overseeing server replacement in
existing schools.
“The leadership of HISD has taken safety
and security to a new level with the highest
quality of products and solutions, meeting
the demands of installation at new schools
and existing campuses,” Fisher said. “Our
goal has been to ensure that the software and
storage systems we provide lend themselves
to the overall health of the security system.
The increased level of visibility in the ‘live view mode’ ensures that what an operator is
looking at is viewed at the proper resolution.”
Upgrades are Underway
Implementation of the safety and security
upgrades is underway. Once fully implemented,
HISD expects to see a significant
increase in the efficiency and effectiveness of
communications—specifically district officials
expect to see real-time 24/7 server
monitoring, allowing for increased communications
between the security operations
center (SOC) and the security system. Technicians
also will be able to troubleshoot
remotely, increasing efficiency.
“The SOC is manned 24/7,” district officials
said. “As servers are migrated to the
Power Ultra, SOC will be monitoring them
24/7. Currently, a manual report is run each
morning to determine what servers are
down. Campuses also may call during the
day to report if they are unable to view their
cameras. Once an issue is identified, a technician
is dispatched to the site to troubleshoot.”
This article originally appeared in the May/June 2019 issue of Campus Security Today.