Monitoring
SEM Security Systems
a division of Southeast Mobility Inc
What is monitoring and why do I have to pay for it? Your panel sits in waiting for
an alarm. When a zone is breached the panel detects that and sends in the
alarm to a monitoring computer. The computer processes the alarm and
displays it on a screen to a waiting operator. Some of the information that is
displayed on that opening screen is your address, your name, your phone
number, your password, and information about what caused the alarm. The
operator picks up the phone, dials your number and waits for you to answer. If
someone answers, the operator will identify themselves and ask questions to
determine who you are and if you are suppose to be there. If you give them the
correct password, they will bid you a good day and everyone goes on about their
business. If you give them the wrong password, they will assume that you are in
peril, bid you a good day and then dispatch the police. If the person that
answers doesn't know the password of if no one answers, they will dispatch the
police. The operator will then bring up the next screen which displays your call
list. They will then go down the call list attempting to notify someone that your
alarm has been activated and that the police have been dispatched and ask
them if they can meet the police at your premise. All of this activity is logged by
the computer and can be retrieved at a later date if needed.
We sometimes have potential customers tell us "by the time the police get here
the burglar will have already escaped" and they are exactly right. What that
person doesn't see is the countless homes that we've been in that have been
burglarized without an alarm system. The thieves went through the home going
through every closet, emptying out drawers and turning over mattresses, bottom
line is that if there was anything in the home worth taking, they found it. An
alarm system can not prevent a break-in, it is designed to detect a break-in and
sound the sirens and report the alarm to the monitoring center. While a thief
may kick in the front door and grab something in plain site, they are not going to
take the time to search the home knowing that someone will be there shortly.
We once installed a camera system in a country store. During the installation we
advised the owner that he really needed to install an alarm system as well. He
decided that the camera system would suffice for the time being. About 3
months later he called our office and said that he needed us to come and install
an alarm system. During the previous night burglars broke out the front window
and entered the store wearing hoods to disguise themselves from the cameras.
They cleaned out everything that was of any value and then left. Looking back
at the video it was determined that the break-in occurred at 2:30 in the morning,
the store owner didn't know his place has been robbed until he arrived at 6am
to open his store. Would an alarm system have prevented the break-in, no. But
the thieves would not have taken as much time as they did without the alarm
system. They may have still broken in, and they no doubt would have taken
some things but it would have been a crash and grab rather than an all out
robbery. Then again, maybe the presence of an alarm system would have
deterred them from breaking in in the first place.
One fact speaks for itself. Your insurance provider will normally give you a 5 to
10 percent discount on your insurance premiums if you have a monitored alarm
system. You and I both know that an insurance company is not going to hand
out a discount unless it benefits them. They know from history that a monitored
alarm system will either deter a break-in or minimize the loss from a break-in,
either way both the home owner and the insurance company comes out ahead.
And my final word about monitoring. In order for monitoring to work, there has
to be communications between the monitoring computer and your alarm panel.
Maintaining that communications line is your responsibility. If your system is
using a POTS line, then you must keep the phone bill paid and the line in
working order. If you are communicating over the internet, you must keep your
network up and operating. The monitoring computer will notify your alarm
company if your alarm panel doesn't check in on a regular basis, usually once a
month, but if your panel indicates a trouble signal with your communications
path your alarm company may not know that until a month later. It is up to you
to notify your alarm company of the problem as soon as possible after it is
displayed on your keypad. We want your system to work 100% of the time but
you have to work with us and let us know when there is a problem.