Tuesday, March 9, 2010

Can you tell the difference between official and fake?

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (WVLT) -- Eloise Rodgers lives alone and has for nearly 30-years.

"If I was going to let someone in I would ask for their I.D."

But how does Eloise know that I.D. is real? K-U-B is one utility that spends a fair amount of time working in neighborhoods. For her, there's more than an I.D. that gives her peace of mind.

"I would look at their truck first. They always have it labeled. Then I would ask for the I.D. before I let them inside," said Rodgers.

"K-U-B encourages customers to always ask for a photo identification badge when anyone claiming to work for the utility comes to their home," Grace Whiteside from KUB told WVLT. Read More...

Friday, March 5, 2010

Emergency Communication Two-Way Radios


Two-Way radios for emergency management use

With all of these disasters taking place, Earthquakes in Chile, Haiti, Taiwan and more were communication has been lost via the use of cell phones and land lines having two-way professional quality walkie talkies is a great standby during a power outage or emergency crises.

Security Imaging is now selling a two-way radio to help in your emergency readiness program.
Prices starting at $269.50ea

For information contact: Security Imaging Corporation 877-369-7033



Raceceiver
This receiver is great for communication during a event or emergency response.
It works one way so the person wearing the device hears information that is directed to them by a two-way radio but can not talk back. This unit is widely used by race directors but has many other uses so this is why Security Imaging Corporation is now selling this great product.
Price: $129.00

Uses include:
Security
Crowd control
Coaching
Racing - RACEceiver Video
And More!

RACEceiver Video

For more information contact:
Security Imaging Corporation
877-369-7033

Monday, March 1, 2010

Enforcement lax on badge policy

Sunday, February 28, 2010
By MICHAEL McAULIFFE
mmcauliffe@repub.com
SPRINGFIELD - School Committee member Antonette E. Pepe was at Roger L. Putnam Vocational Technical High School one day earlier this month and was very upset by something she did not see: a single student wearing an identification badge.

Pepe wants each of the city's nearly 25,500 public school students to wear an ID badge. The School Committee passed a policy in 2002 that middle school and high school students wear badges, but it has gone dormant.

"It's a major issue," Pepe said last week. "You want safety in the schools, and this is one of the ways to provide that."
Read more: