SmartCOP to Attend SEAFWA Annual Conference & FL CJIS Annual Training Symposium

Join SmartCOP at SEAFWA and FL CJIS to explore our cutting-edge public safety and conservation enforcement software solutions!

SmartCOP will be attending the 2024 SEAFWA Annual Conference and FL CJIS Annual Training Symposium. Learn how our NIBRS-compliant public safety software and specialized RMS for conservation law enforcement can enhance your agency’s operations.

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Join Us at SmartCOP UNITE 2024

At SmartCOP UNITE, our goal is to help you enhance your user experience and optimize the way you use SmartCOP's innovative tools.

Join us for SmartCOP’s 2024 UNITE event in Orlando, FL! Learn about the latest updates on NIBRS, SmartJail Corretrak integration, CAD Analytics, and more. This event is designed to enhance your public safety operations and connect you with other SmartCOP users. Don’t miss out—register now!

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Transforming Public Safety Software with SmartCOP’s Solutions

SmartCOP's Public Safety Software Solutions

In public safety, the right software makes all the difference. SmartCOP’s public safety software streamlines law enforcement operations with efficient response times, accurate data management, and seamless communication. With real-time data access and user-friendly interfaces, SmartCOP optimizes workflows and decision-making, creating safer communities. Invest in SmartCOP for efficiency and community engagement.

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Monroe County Sheriff’s Office on SmartCOP’s Product Line

Monroe County Sheriff's Office - Florida

The Monroe County Sheriff’s Office, serving the Florida Keys, has been a customer of CTS/SmartCOP for about 20 years – Beginning the conversion from an antiquated COBOL based system to the robust software suite that CTS/SmartCOP offered in 1999. Our agency was primarily interested in the Computer Aided Dispatch program, which was brought online in early 2000, then the other modules soon followed.

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SmartCOP Awarded Major Jail Management System Contract

SmartCOP Awarded Major Jail Management System Contract

Published August 17th, 2015

PENSACOLA, FL — SmartCOP, an industry leader for public safety software solutions, is pleased to announce that Gwinnett County, GA has selected SmartCOP’s SmartJAIL software suite to replace their current Jail Management System.

Gwinnett County Sheriff’s Office, under the leadership of Sheriff Butch Conway and Jail Administrator Don Pinkard, conducted a multi-year evaluation and selection process that included corrections professionals from all functional units of the Jail. The SmartJAIL software will support the Gwinnett County Jail, County Correctional Institute, and Diversion Center. These sites combine for more than 40,000 bookings per year, and an Average Daily Population of more than 2,600 inmates.

“The County has experienced significant growth over the last decade and we simply outgrew the capabilities of our existing system”, said Sylvia Black, Technical Services Director for the Sheriff’s Office. “We need a system that is configurable to the needs of a large jail, but not one that is unnecessarily complex to use or to maintain. After a lot of research, site visits, and a robust RFP process, we are confident that we have selected a solution that will serve us well for many, many years” Black added.

“We are proud of our industry-leading retention rate with agencies of all sizes in the Southeast and around the nation,” said SmartCOP President Kay Stephenson. “SmartCOP products and customer service once again out-performed our national competition and exceeded the rigorous requirements of Gwinnett County.” Key requirements were a proven technology base, ease of use, mechanisms to increase the efficiency, accuracy and quality of data collected, the ability to securely share information with the Courts and other Law Enforcement agencies in the county, features to support the analysis of collected data, and proven integration capabilities with other service providers (Commissary, Video Visitation, etc.)

The announcement represents another step forward for SmartCOP, which has long-standing contracts with other satisfied sheriffs across Florida, Georgia, Alabama, and Montana.

“The feedback we receive from clients and the results we produce are very gratifying,” said Don Newsome, SmartCOP’s Jail Product Director. “Our products — which are scalable from small local jails to very large, multi-facility detention centers — are proven to increase operational efficiency, compliance with accreditation standards, accountability to the public, and officer, staff and inmate safety”.

 About SmartCOP

1SmartCOP, Inc., a business unit of the Harris Operating Group of Constellation Software, Inc. Harris Systems USA, Inc. is a member of the Harris Operating Group and is one of the legal entities that markets and distributes software products and services under the SmartCOP platform. SmartCOP engages in system development, implementation, and support services for a fully integrated suite of public safety products including Computer Aided Dispatch (CAD), Records Management System (RMS), Mobile Computing with Field Based Reporting (FBR), and Jail Management System (JMS). Our solution is a field-proven public safety system designed to respond, without fail, to first response demands.

New records system could end the paper chase

New records system could end the paper chase

Published June 16th, 2014

At the time this was written, SmartCOP, Inc. was doing business as CTS America.

Source: Bradford County news 
Release Date:
 10/9/2009

Bradford Sheriff Gordon Smith told the county commission Monday that he and his office has been working with other county and municipal departments on a unified records management system. “We’ve got to have something that’s more efficient and a whole lot less expensive,” Smith said.

Smith said the county has paid purchasing and annual maintenance or licensing costs for software that was supposed to be used in vehicles and at the fire stations that was never installed. Since 1997, he said the county has spent more than $1 million is records management software and used only about 60 percent of it.

The goal is to make the records system paperless, or as paperless as possible. When an officer files a report, that report should be able to be pulled up in the clerk’s office, the jail, the state attorney’s office, the courts, other law enforcement agencies in the county, etc.

Currently most are running on different systems. Even the jail and sheriff’s office are on separate systems. The result is a daily paper chase for those who work in these agencies, one that Smith hopes to help put a stop to.

“Our people wear their legs out chasing paper every single day,” the sheriff said.

mith tried working a deal with one of the current vendors the county spends tens of thousands of dollars with each year, but couldn’t cut a deal that didn’t involve spending thousands more on software the county had already purchased. Instead, the sheriff is now looking elsewhere.

The system under consideration-SmartCOP from CTS America-is one used by Florida Highway Patrol, Baker County, Union County and others. The Eighth Judicial Circuit “loves it” and already has four of its counties using the system, according to Smith. In addition to everyone working from the same system, there will be enhancements such as computer-aided dispatch in emergency vehicles that should help reduce response times. When dispatch sends the information, it will pull up the address and map on the rescue unit’s (or fire engine’s) computer screen, Smith said. A unified system will also eliminate the need to enter data multiple times in different offices. It will be entered once and then be available elsewhere to those who need it. Smith said the county would be saving time and money.

Members in charge of the Intergovernmental Communications Fund agreed to invest in the purchase of the software. The first-year purchase installment of $68,000 will be paid out of IGCF funds. Smith hopes to use grant or other funds to pay for the three subsequent payments and not draw those yearly payments from IGCF. He will budget for the payments in fines and forfeitures and use that money, if necessary, to completely pay for the software.

There is no maintenance cost during year one. After that, the system will cost the county $39,000 annually versus the $71,000 the county is paying each year for the current system, Smith said. Every municipality has agreed to the software switch, Smith said, which means every law enforcement agency, fire and EMS station, and court office will be on the same system. The county commission joined IGCF in agreeing to the purchase of the new software.

Clerk Ray Norman said a lot could have been done prior to now, but Smith is taking a giant step to making it happen now. It will save time and effort for all agencies involved, he said. “It’s really a big step in the right direction,” Norman said.

Sheriff Mark Hunter Focuses on Technology Transition

Columbia County Focuses on New Technology

Published June 30th, 2011

New Technology Advancing Sheriff's Office

At the time this was written, SmartCOP, Inc. was doing business as CTS America.

The North Florida Herald Posted: Thursday, June 30, 2011
Continuing budget cuts are bringing law enforcement changes to Columbia County, including Fort White, and the Sheriff is focusing on technology to make the transition.
About 70 people gathered at the Fort White Community Center on Thursday, June 23 for a multimedia presentation by the Columbia County Sheriff’s Office that focused, in part, on the new technology the Sheriff’s is embracing.

The meeting seemed more like a family reunion than a “traveling road show” as Columba County Sheriff’s Public Information Officer Sgt. Ed Seifert liked to call it.
After a light dinner and heavy chatter, Sheriff Mark Hunter talked business. With fewer funds, Hunter said he made the logical move to revamp communications through a new technology, the SmartCOP computer software by CTS America, a systems development company.  According to the CTS America Website, the SmartCOP is a multi-agency system that streamlines the call taking and dispatch process by allowing for rapid data entry, setting call priorities and making resource recommendations.

The new technology, along with a 911 conversion call plan and new radios, cost about $2 million of grants from the county.
Still, the benefits outweigh the costs, according to Thursday’s presentation. Instead of 9-10 pages of handwritten reports that take days to process, Seifert said, SmartCOP sends an e-mail from the crime scene to the sergeant in a matter of minutes. “That means more efficiency and more road time,” Seifert said. This is crucial for the 135 paid deputies who patrol Columbia County, an area that encompasses nearly 70,000 residents over 797 square miles.  Hunter now had deputies serving multiple duties. For instance, a patrol deputy may also be a rescue diver and a member of the SWAT team. Even the police dogs are multipurpose with abilities to sniff narcotics, and trail and apprehend suspects.

Hunter is also promising a multipurpose district office in Fort White that would consolidate the tax collector’s, the county clerk’s and the sheriff’s office under one roof.
“If we don’t have the building by year-end, in December, I am committed to providing the manpower and the assets,” Hunter said.  Other technological changes include a crime map that Hunter plans to implement within the next six weeks.  He described the crime map much like a weather forecaster illustrates the weather. Crimes density will be displayed like thunderstorms or scattered showers, depending on where crimes occur and how often.  So not only law enforcement but also citizens will be able to see any patterns that arise when the “crime element moves around.” For the Columbia County Sheriff’s Office, the number one concern is victim crime, followed by drugs and community networking, Hunter said.

In tune with Hunter’s concern for victim crime are the statistics that show his agency’s crime solve rate at 33.5 percent- a figure that he touted as being about 10 percent higher than the state crime solve rates.  “We’re just gonna keep on working and try to make it gooder and gooder,” Hunter said.