The relationship between surveillance and security operational forces on the ground is one that is usually subject to some kind of tension. Issues of power, reporting lines, differences in priority, and authority and procedures all complicate the relationship. This is particularly the case where surveillance personnel see things that have to be responded to urgently and are very 'enthusiastic' in trying to get people to respond to observed conditions. Even within the same police authority, the relationship between surveillance and operational responses can have its own conflicts.
Where you introduce surveillance as another agency or even private security, the tension levels go up significantly – “who are you to tell me what to do” is a common issue the world over. If we look at contract security environments, surveillance and physical operations are often from different companies and this is often a deliberate strategy by management to introduce checks and balances in accountability. However, in many cases like this, the view of physical security is that surveillance is seen to be 'policing' or checking the conduct of security officers and it has the potential to disrupt relationships.
The surveillance role is one of auditing and monitoring by nature. However, this does not have to be an adversarial role. The combined working together of the two functions can result in a team-based approach that can bring the benefits of synergy and make the overall impact for protection much stronger. Surveillance and physical security personnel see the world from different viewpoints and in doing so can complement each other extremely well. Where there is effective communication between the parties, monitoring of issues and an effective response is much more likely. In an Australian study on CCTV operations in town centres, the information conveyed by police led to a substantial amount of CCTV 'detections'.
The key factor in success of surveillance and physical operations working together is the dynamic that is created by the management of each of these branches. That sets the working culture for the rest of the branch. Further, when there is an issue, it needs to be quickly addressed and strong commitment shown by management.
There is a tendency for the different parties to blame each other when there is a service delivery failure rather than taking on responsibility and trying to work out how to avoid such issues in future. It also needs to be recognised that there is no substitute for a physical response. No matter how good the surveillance work, if you don’t have an effective security response it has little impact.
Providing clear, concise and direct information to response units on the ground is essential. Ideally, response personnel should know as much as possible when they arrive on the scene and this communication can come from the control room. For surveillance, they also have an important role in backing up response units. This includes maintaining surveillance to see potential threats and issues like the potential for danger in the scene being responded to, anticipating and looking for issues in the broader area around the incident point, and importantly, protecting the reputation of the response officials.
Riots are a prime example of this where the broader picture given by cameras can assist in safeguarding personnel by seeing movements that represent a danger to those on the ground. Response officers are doing a difficult job and there is potential for them to be accused of issues by the people they are apprehending or dealing with. Surveillance is a key factor that can negate any such accusation and provide evidence of appropriate conduct.
Surveillance monitoring and recommendations for deployment can also play a major deterrent role in stopping potential incidents. By moving security into areas that are under threat, the presence of a response can deter criminals and stifle crime before it happens. Priorities for such deployment can be made because of the 'bigger picture' obtained in the control room where a range of areas can be quickly checked out and evaluated. By moving physical operational staff around to key areas, you can give an impression of a much larger security presence because they arrive quickly and in force at the affected areas.
At the same time, physical security has an important role in providing early warning and intelligence information to act on. By hearing what is happening on the ground, seeing the expressions and interactions of people, and being close to the action, security officers or police response units can request surveillance to check out issues they themselves can’t see, and to warn of developing situations that can call for appropriate camera placements. Tracking people in a large area is often done more easily with cameras than physically trying to follow people through large crowds.
The working relationship of surveillance and operational response units or guards on the ground is a key factor in success. At the same time, there is a danger of surveillance becoming too reliant on physical security for detection. As indicated, in the case of the Australian study, police were responsible for a large proportion of incidents followed up and confirmed by operators. Ideally, operators should have a strong independently confirmed detection rate to show they are also picking up issues well. Communication of detection should be a two way process. Otherwise surveillance operators run the risk of being perceived that they are just there in a support role.
Dr Craig Donald is a human factors specialist in security and CCTV. He is a director of Leaderware which provides instruments for the selection of CCTV operators, X-ray screeners and other security personnel in major operations around the world. He also runs CCTV Surveillance Skills and Body Language, and Advanced Surveillance Body Language courses for CCTV operators, supervisors and managers internationally, and consults on CCTV management. He can be contacted on +27 (0)11 787 7811 or [email protected]
Tel: | +27 11 787 7811 |
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