CTS Products on Georgia State Contract

CTS Products on Georgia State Contract

Published June 16th, 2014

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

CTS America was recently awarded a contract with the state of Georgia. The team at CTS is excited to work with the Georgia State Patrol and is planning for the wide variety of tasks ahead.

As part of the agreement, CTS will assist the Georgia State Patrol in consolidating 48 dispatch locations into 11 efficient, regional communication centers over a two year period. CTS will install hardware at the new dispatch centers and in 833 Georgia State Patrol vehicles. With the help of CTS America, Georgia State Patrol vehicles will allow troopers to complete almost every aspect of their job electronically. Transmitting information to their supervisors will be seamless and convenient, allowing troopers to stay on the road serving their communities.

CTS is also pleased to announce that Georgia local government and educational institutions are now permitted to purchase CTS and partner products though the Georgia State contract, which is administered by the Georgia Department of Administrative Services. Available products include CAD, Records Management System, Mobile Computer and Jail Management.

Key benefits of the contract include:

Cost Benefits

  • Aggressive Software Licensing Costs
  • Lower Maintenance Costs
  • Reduced Labor Costs
  • Aggressive Pricing and Service Agreement with Dell
  • Eliminates the requirement for a RFP

Service Benefits

  • Complete solution pricing for hardware from Dell and Computer Aided Dispatch, Records Management System, Vehicles Software, Hardware and Installation
  • CTS America and Dell will work with agencies to customize quotation for software and hardware to meet their needs.
  • 24/7 Support Desk is provided by CTS for software service and 4 hour service response is offered from Dell.

All agencies have different requirements and therefore, a customized quotation will be provided for your needs. The State Contract provides pricing from Dell for hardware, from Jotto Desk for vehicle consoles and computer mounts, and from Interceptor Public Safety for vehicle installation. With your quote from CTS for software and services, the Authorized User or Agency will be provided a set of hardware specifications and quantities. With your permission, CTS will submit those specifications to Dell pursuant to the State of Georgia Contract under which the state has negotiated aggressive pricing for the hardware component. They will present you with a complete quote. Alternately, you may take the recommended hardware configurations and numbers and seek a quote directly from Dell or the hardware manufacturer of your choice. CTS has certified specific configurations of hardware to work with their software and specific services from Dell for hardware installation. Your actual order will be placed based on an agreed Statement of Work including specific progress and payment milestones.

Come by our booth at the Georgia Sheriffs Command Conference April 22nd at Stone Mtn. to see our products be demonstrated and talk with our team.

We look forward to serving you and your agencies, and encourage you to contact us with questions.

Sincerely,
Jim Benson
CTS America Chief Operating Officer
(877) 762-7826

Mr. Bernard Joy is administering this contract for the State of Georgia and can be reached at (404) 463-5556 and [email protected].

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.

Georgia DNR Program Aims to Improve Ranger Safety, Customer Service

Georgia DNR Program Aims to Improve Ranger Safety, Customer Service

Published June 16th, 2014

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

Source: Jacksonville.com Release Date: 4/13/2010

BRUNSWICK – Mark Carson routinely patrols Coastal Georgia’s isolated woods and waterways alone and far from the closest backup.

Until now, Carson and his fellow Georgia Department of Natural Resources law enforcement rangers have had no way to quickly determine whether they face a law-abiding sportsman or a violent criminal. Nor has there been a way for emergency personnel to know where to start looking should a ranger be injured or otherwise be unable to call for help.

Rangers are testing a computer-assisted communications and data system with a built-in GPS locator in a pilot program that ties the DNR into the Georgia State Patrol’s network, said Capt. Stephen Adams, who supervises the 25 rangers assigned to nine coastal counties.

Three DNR Game Management officers and two park rangers who face similar situations are in the pilot program, which began March 29.

They have been issued rugged, military-grade laptop computers that can be mounted in their patrol vehicles and boats. The system allows them 24-hour communications with state patrol dispatchers. It also gives them direct access from the field to the Georgia Crime Information System and the DNR license data base.

“The GPS lets them know where your boat or car is, so they have an area to start searching if something happens to you and you can’t radio or call for help,” Carson said.

Adams said “first and foremost, officer safety is the reason for this system.”

An accidental shooting nearly two years ago shows the need for such technology, Carson and Adams said.

“On Thanksgiving 2008, one of our officers was shot and had to use his personal cell phone to call for help,” Carson said.

DNR Cpl. Curtis Wright was investigating a report of illegal waterfowl hunting when he was struck in the chest by a rifle bullet fired by a deer hunter near Port Wentworth. The hunter administered emergency first-aid, then used his all-terrain vehicle to carry Wright out of the woods to meet emergency personnel.

“Nobody knew where he was … and that delayed help getting to him. This system would have gotten us a lot closer to his last known location so we could have gotten to him faster,” Adams said.

Wright recovered from the shooting. On any given day, however, rangers may encounter potentially deadly situations.

“A ranger frequently runs up on meth labs, convicted felons with firearms and people who are wanted … Until now, they’d be in the middle of nowhere dealing with an armed person and nobody would know where they were,” Adams said.

Rangers have department-issued radios, and many also carry personal cell phones. They’ve relied on county sheriffs for backup after 4:30 p.m. daily and on weekends when DNR offices are closed.

Until now, rangers haven’t been able to directly or immediately access the statewide crime data base from the field. GCIC allows officers to check individuals for outstanding warrants, and license tags to determine if a vehicle or boat has been reported stolen.

“With this system, we also will get BOLOs [law enforcement Be on the Look Out bulletins] directly, which is the first time that we’ve had that capability,” he said.

A similar system is used by the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission and Florida Highway Patrol.

Adams said the system has already helped in one case. Recently in Richmond Hill, a ranger stopped a man to check his fishing license. He also checked GCIC, and discovered the man was wanted for arrest in Bryan County, Adams said.

It also will allow rangers to spend more time on patrol and less in the office doing administrative paperwork, Adams said.

“They can do their administrative duties while parked at the boat ramp, wildlife management area or side of the road,” he said.

Adams said the pilot program is being funded by a federal boating safety grant. Each laptop costs about $3,000 because it is built to withstand saltwater and other harsh conditions.

To keep expenses down, the DNR is piggy-backing on the state patrol’s computer network, sharing its server and using its software, Adams said.

Like troopers, rangers will be able to print out copies of licenses, reports or citations in the field, Carson said.

A ranger first class, Carson patrols Glynn and Camden counties as well as offshore sometimes as far as 25 miles out in the Atlantic Ocean when checking fishing vessels.

“This will be a big help to us when we’re dealing with our outdoor customers,” Carson said.

Sometimes, hunters and fishermen say they lost or left their license somewhere, he said.

“Now, we can run them through the computer to verify they had a valid license or boat registration, and print them out a copy on the spot to replace the one they lost,” Carson said.

Carson said he likes the system. The rangers’ comments and suggestions will be incorporated into a report due in June, which could determine whether the system will be expanded to all DNR rangers, Adams said.

[email protected],(912) 264-0405

CTS America Awarded Major Florida Public Safety Contract

Image of a Florida Highway Patrol vehicle for a state trooper.
Image of a Florida Highway Patrol vehicle for a state trooper.

CTS America Awarded Major Florida Public Safety Contract

Published October 25th, 2013

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

PENSACOLA, Fla., Oct. 25, 2013 /PRNewswire/ — CTS America Inc. was recently awarded a ten-year contract renewal with the Florida Department of Highway Safety & Motor Vehicles, outperforming other major national public safety technology companies to win the contract. CTS America will provide Computer Aided Dispatch (CAD), Records Management System (RMS) and their highly regarded Field Based Reporting (FBR) technologies to the Florida Highway Patrol and the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission.

http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/cts-america-awarded-major-florid…

“We are proud of our industry-leading retention rate with agencies of all sizes in Florida and around the nation,” said CTS America President Kay Stephenson. “CTS America products and customer service once again out-performed our national competition and exceeded the rigorous requirements of the Florida Highway Patrol.” Key requirements were a proven technology base, ease of use, mechanisms to increase the timeliness, accuracy and quality of data collected, the ability to securely share information across multiple public safety organizations within the state, and features to support the analysis of collected data.

The announcement represents another step forward for CTS America, which has long-standing contracts with other satisfied Florida clients including the Department of Transportation, the State Fire Marshal, and Department of Agriculture. Additionally, CTS America systems are in place with dozens of municipal Police Departments and 24 of Florida’s 67 Sheriff’s, establishing a larger Florida presence than any other technology provider. At the local law enforcement level, CTS America’s client list includes agencies from Florida, Alabama, Georgia and Montana.

“Florida is often looked to for leadership in public safety technology and best practices by agencies in other states,” said Shane Lincke, founder of the company. Due to their history of success in Florida, CTS America has also been selected as the service provider for the Georgia State Patrol, the South Carolina Department of Public Safety, and the Montana Highway Patrol. CTS America is also currently competing for key contracts in a number of other states.

The company is also expanding into the university and college campus security sector citing the tremendous growth of higher education in recent years and their emphasis on campus and student safety.

“The feedback we receive from clients and the results we produce are very gratifying,” said Michael Snyder, Public Safety Market Director. “Our products, which are scalable from small local agencies to large state and federal agencies, are proven to help reduce crime, increase public safety and boost the efficiency of law enforcement around the nation.”

About CTS America, Inc.
CTS America, an innovator in public safety software since 1999, offers cost-effective, fully integrated and scalable technologies that maximize the effectiveness of law enforcement agencies of all sizes in the United States. Offerings include Computer Aided Dispatch (CAD), Law Enforcement Records Management Systems (RMS), Mobile Computer and Field Based Reporting (FBR), and Jail Management Systems (JMS).

CTS Demonstrates Multi-Agency Capability – Oakland Police Department, Florida

Close up image of the badge on the chest of an officer with a blurred-out background used on the Partners page.
Close up image of the badge on the chest of an officer with a blurred-out background used on the Partners page.

CTS Demonstrates Multi-Agency Capability - Oakland Police Department, Florida

Published May 24th, 2013

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

Pensacola, FL – CTS America is pleased to welcome the addition of the Oakland (Florida) Police Department. Oakland joined the Winter Garden Police Department for CAD, RMS, and Field Based Reporting.

About CTS America – CTS America (SmartCOP, Inc.), a privately-held Florida corporation, is engaged 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, and Jail Management System (JMS).

Village of Tequesta Police Department Joins CTS Family

Close up image of the badge on the chest of an officer with a blurred-out background used on the Partners page.
Close up image of the badge on the chest of an officer with a blurred-out background used on the Partners page.

Village of Tequesta Police Department Joins CTS Family

Published August 16th, 2012

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

Pensacola, FL – CTS America is pleased to welcome the Village of Tequesta Police Department. The Tequesta Police Department implemented Computer Aided Dispatch, Records Management, and Mobile Field Based Reporting.

Both the Mayor and Police Chief of Tequesta sent letters of appreciation to CTS America for the knowledgeable, courteous, and professional employees implementing and training the new system. “Your ability to train is far superior to any other trainer I have experienced. Your ability to train our officers from a real user prospective is top notch.” Mayor Thomas Paterno

About CTS America – CTS America (SmartCOP, Inc.), a privately-held Florida corporation, is engaged 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, and Jail Management System (JMS).

CTS America Increases Presence in Florida

CTS America Increases Presence in Florida

Published November 16th, 2011

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

Pensacola, FL –CTS America was awarded a contract from an RFP with the Putnam County Sheriffs’ Office to implement our Computer Aided Dispatch, Records Management, Mobile Field Based Reporting, and Jail Management System.

In May 2012, Putnam County Emergency Services added CTS America’s mobile software enabling both agencies to work cooperatively in the use of the software for public safety purposes.

About CTS America – CTS America (SmartCOP, Inc.), a privately-held Florida corporation, is engaged 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, and Jail Management System (JMS).

CTS Provides latest in E-Citations to Palm Beach / FHP

Icon for SmartCOP's Field Based Reporting.
Icon for SmartCOP's Field Based Reporting.

CTS Provides latest in E-Citations to Palm Beach / FHP

Published October 3rd, 2011

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

CLERK & COMPTROLLER, FLORIDA HIGHWAY PATROL PARTNER FOR MORE EFFICIENT PROCESSING OF TRAFFIC TICKETS

New technology enables electronic transmission of ticket images

WEST PALM BEACH, FLA. (October 3, 2011) – Clerk Sharon Bock announced today that her office will be the first Clerk’s office in Florida to accept electronic images of traffic tickets from the Florida Highway Patrol, saving costly trips to the courthouse to deliver paper tickets.

The new system, which launches in October, will allow citations to get into the Clerk’s system more quickly, since images of citations will be delivered electronically. People will be able to pay fines, sign up for traffic school, or otherwise settle their case faster without waiting on a paper ticket to arrive at the Clerk’s office.

“No one likes getting a ticket, but we’re always looking for ways to improve our services,” said Clerk Sharon Bock. “Helping citizens save time by navigating government more efficiently is our goal. That’s why this partnership with the Florida Highway Patrol is so important.”

Tickets for violations such as speeding or driving without a seatbelt will be transmitted electronically to the Clerk’s office at the end of each day, and available for review the next business day. Citations for offenses such as driving 30 mph over the speed limit, or that involve serious injuries or fatalities, and require a court appearance will still require the delivery of a paper ticket to the Clerk’s office.

Electronic transmittal of tickets also will help boost efficiency in the Clerk’s busy County Criminal division, which processed 344,000 tickets last year, 25 percent of which were from FHP.

People will still receive a paper ticket from the Highway Patrol trooper, but the Clerk’s office will not have to wait for the paper copy to open a new case.

Florida Highway Patrol is the first agency that has agreed to transmit ticket images electronically. Clerk Bock said she hopes to expand the program to include other local law enforcement agencies as well.

There are several options for paying traffic tickets, including paying at any of our courthouse locations, at our Midwestern Communities Service Center in Royal Palm Beach, by mail, online or at Check Cashing Store locations throughout South Florida. Information about entering a not guilty plea, enrolling in traffic school and answers to frequently asked questions are available on our Traffic Violations page on www.mypalmbeachclerk.com.

MCT Version 8 with Two Factor Authentication Available for Release

Image of an officer in his vehicle, typing on his mobile computer terminal.
Image of an officer in his vehicle, typing on his mobile computer terminal.

MCT Version 8 with Two Factor Authentication Available for Release

Published September 16th, 2011

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

Pensacola, Florida – CTS America is pleased to announce the release of their SmartMOBILE Mobile Computer Terminal (MCT), Version 8 product.
MCT version 8 includes functionality for client law enforcement agencies to provide access to CJIS-protected resources via in-car terminals. CJIS security policy (CJIS Security Policy December 2008 version 4.5) requires that certain safeguards be in place to prevent unauthorized access.
MCT version 8 meets the requirements for safeguarding access to the CJIS-protected resources by using two-factor authentication, 128-bit encryption, and providing accountability for requests to access CJIS-protected resources.

About CTS America – CTS America (SmartCOP, Inc.), a privately-held Florida corporation, is engaged 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, and Jail Management System (JMS).

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.