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Case Studies
Valhalla Union Free School District recently decided to work with Safety Vision’s dealer in the New York metro area, Digital Provisions, on the task of adding camera systems to their school buses. Safety Vision is celebrating its 25th year in business, and was able to successfully meet the needs Valhalla’s transportation company, Charles Stotz Inc.
With the transportation available to disabled persons already limited, the safety of everyone on-board is even more paramount.
Read how Safety Vision helped reduce accident risk, ensure passenger safety and protect drivers from false accusations of mistreatment.
"These camera views from the intuitive, crystal clear, and consistently reliable product of Safety Vision from Houston, TX, have essentially eliminated distracted operations."
In South Texas, Sharyland Independent School District is responsible for safely transporting over 10,000 students every day. However, Sharyland was one of the few districts in the country that had no cameras on their buses, despite the fact that cameras have become an industry standard. Since student discipline was one of their main challenges, and the fact that schools are held liable in many cases, the district felt that having cameras installed would be a great asset.
A rail fleet as big as the Utah Transit Authority’s (UTA) requires constant oversight. The agency’s TRAX light-rail system and its FrontRunner heavy-rail service combined to provide over 1.8 million rides in January 2018 alone, making the system susceptive to onboard incidents. Despite this, the UTA had approximately 400 networked cameras in use with no networked-connected cameras on any of its fleet of 717 vehicles in 2002. Lamount Worthy, video security administrator (and new to the job in 2013), was tasked by agency leadership to expand UTA’s surveillance capabilities to encompass its entire fleet. Initially, expansion meant adding six recording servers and increasing UTA’s server space by 200 percent. Then Worthy’s team turned its attention to outfitting its fleet.
Valhalla Union Free School District recently decided to work with Safety Vision’s dealer in the New York metro area, Digital Provisions, on the task of adding camera systems to their school buses. Safety Vision is celebrating its 25th year in business, and was able to successfully meet the needs Valhalla’s transportation company, Charles Stotz Inc.
With the transportation available to disabled persons already limited, the safety of everyone on-board is even more paramount.
Read how Safety Vision helped reduce accident risk, ensure passenger safety and protect drivers from false accusations of mistreatment.
"These camera views from the intuitive, crystal clear, and consistently reliable product of Safety Vision from Houston, TX, have essentially eliminated distracted operations."
In South Texas, Sharyland Independent School District is responsible for safely transporting over 10,000 students every day. However, Sharyland was one of the few districts in the country that had no cameras on their buses, despite the fact that cameras have become an industry standard. Since student discipline was one of their main challenges, and the fact that schools are held liable in many cases, the district felt that having cameras installed would be a great asset.
A rail fleet as big as the Utah Transit Authority’s (UTA) requires constant oversight. The agency’s TRAX light-rail system and its FrontRunner heavy-rail service combined to provide over 1.8 million rides in January 2018 alone, making the system susceptive to onboard incidents. Despite this, the UTA had approximately 400 networked cameras in use with no networked-connected cameras on any of its fleet of 717 vehicles in 2002. Lamount Worthy, video security administrator (and new to the job in 2013), was tasked by agency leadership to expand UTA’s surveillance capabilities to encompass its entire fleet. Initially, expansion meant adding six recording servers and increasing UTA’s server space by 200 percent. Then Worthy’s team turned its attention to outfitting its fleet.
Valhalla Union Free School District recently decided to work with Safety Vision’s dealer in the New York metro area, Digital Provisions, on the task of adding camera systems to their school buses. Safety Vision is celebrating its 25th year in business, and was able to successfully meet the needs Valhalla’s transportation company, Charles Stotz Inc.
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