Contact Center Solutions Industry News

TMCNet:  C-Tran plans to upgrade video security technology

[December 29, 2012]

C-Tran plans to upgrade video security technology

Dec 29, 2012 (The Columbian - McClatchy-Tribune Information Services via COMTEX) -- They've captured major traffic accidents, wayward goats and everything in between. By the end of next year, surveillance cameras on board C-Tran buses should also be capturing a clearer picture.

The agency is planning a $1.35 million upgrade that will replace the cameras and bring them into a more streamlined system. C-Tran now uses clunky technology dating to the mid-1990s in some cases, requiring plenty of leg work to review even the shortest clip. The entire process often takes two to three hours, said C-Tran Field Operations Manager Bob Medcraft.

Instant replay Not quite.

"It's really time-consuming," Medcraft said. "We try and only do it when we have an event that's worthy of doing it." The broad upgrade aims to quicken that process, giving all buses new video technology with the help of a federal grant. The project -- 80 percent paid through the federal State of Good Repair program -- will equip buses with higher quality cameras and automatic wireless downloading capability.

The idea is to make the process less burdensome and less costly, Medcraft said.

"It's just a better utilization of time," he said.

C-Tran routinely pulls bus surveillance videos for review. Usually the reason is fairly mundane, Medcraft said -- customer questions or complaints; for example, people who say they were passed by at a bus stop without being picked up.

The agency also reviews passengers' injury claims and every crash involving a C-Tran bus. It may also assist with the investigation of an incident that doesn't involve C-Tran, if a bus camera happens to catch it. That was the case last month, when a car sped past a bus on Highway 99 before losing control in a crash that killed one person and critically injured another.

"We work really collaboratively with the Vancouver Police Department and the sheriff's department," Medcraft said.

Medcraft insists the vast majority of what C-Tran's on-board cameras record is quite boring. But not all of it. In 2009, cameras captured a pair of persistent goats boarding a C-Tran bus in Vancouver's Minnehaha area. (They did not pay fares.) "They just got right on and walked on down the aisle," said Scott Patterson, C-Tran's public affairs director.

The resulting video ended up on YouTube and made national news. Medcraft still chuckles when talking about it.

C-Tran buses generally have either six or seven on-board interior cameras. Depending on the vehicle, video is stored on one of three types of hard drives. To retrieve it, workers must remove the drive from the bus, then take it to be viewed through docking stations at C-Tran's administrative office.

Most footage is never reviewed, Medcraft said, unless there's a reason to review it. Video may stay on file for about two weeks before the system starts recording over itself, he said.

Medcraft described the surveillance system as a crucial cost-saver for the agency, particularly in terms of liability. He said on-board video has debunked some claims of people who said they were injured in on a bus, for example, but the evidence didn't match their story.

The upgrade is part of a series of technology upgrades that C-Tran has in the works, including a move toward an electronic fare payment system. The new cameras could be fully installed by the end of 2013, Medcraft said.

You Tube Goats on C-Tran bus Eric Florip: 360-735-4541; http://twitter.com/col_enviro; eric.florip@columbian.com.

.

___ (c)2012 The Columbian (Vancouver, Wash.) Visit The Columbian (Vancouver, Wash.) at www.columbian.com Distributed by MCT Information Services

[ Back To Contact Center Solutions Homepage's Homepage ]



Related Contact Center Solutions Articles

FOLLOW US

Contact Center Solutions Glossary of Terms

Featured Whitepaper

    Microsoft® Lync® in the Contact Center: Integrating with Customer Interaction Center™ to Provide a Barrier‐free Customer Experience To implement contact center functionality, organizations using Microsoft Lync Server 2010 can follow the unified communications blueprint of open standards interoperability and integrate to a contact center solution of their choice. Customer Interaction Center (CIC) from Interactive Intelligence is a proven best of breed contact center solution that merits consideration ...

Featured Success Story

    Contact Center Solutions Featured Success Story
    Interactive Intelligence all-in-one IP communications software suite integrated with Microsoft Lync helps Bentley save $200,000 annually.

Featured Product Demo

    Contact Center Solutions Interaction Analyzer™
    Interaction Analyzer™
    Real-time word and phrase spotting. Alerting. Analytics. Scoring. Coaching. Watch how Interaction Analyzer turns every moment, of every past and present call, into data that lets you deliver an exceptional customer experience.

Featured Resources