Construction thieves operate on the low-hanging fruit
principle," said Eddie Martinez, director of safety and risk for
Miami-based Munilla Construction Management. "They look for the quickest
way to get in and out of the job site without being noticed, and if you leave
yourself vulnerable, you’re going to get hit."Content belongs to www.constructiondive.com
Indeed, the construction industry loses up to $1 billion
annually in heavy equipment theft alone, according to data collected by the Des
Plaines, IL-based National Insurance Crime Bureau. That doesn’t even account
for smaller tools stolen from job sites every day, often to be resold on
websites like Craigslist at deep discounts to retail.
According to a survey by the Chartered Institute of
Building, a U.K.-based international construction industry group, nine in 10 construction professionals say they’re affected regularly by theft, and one in
five say theft can occur weekly at their jobsite.
That's not to say they aren't trying to prevent it.
Historically, the industry has relied on barbed wire-fenced
perimeters, night watchmen and guard dogs to discourage unauthorized access to
job sites. With the development of low-cost surveillance cameras, controlled
access systems and GPS-enabled tracking devices for equipment, along with the
ability to enable and control such devices over wireless and mesh networks,
construction pros today are finding theft deterrent to be similarly
straightforward — even if it is higher-tech.
Caught on camera
Many construction crews are taking advantage of the ability
to track ingress and egress to job sites in real time. Among them is CNY Group,
in New York City, which is heading up construction management at the Marriott
Edition in Times Square, as well as the Tammany Hall renovation in Union Square
and the residences at the Woolworth Building in Lower Manhattan.
"Having controlled access is one of the primary
elements that will improve security."
CNY also augments its controlled-entry system with
surveillance cameras at all points of entry to a job site and at property line
locations where access could be potentially gained through the roof or a window
of an adjacent property. Cameras for construction surveillance can typically be
backed up to both DVR and to the cloud and can offer high definition and high
resolution even in low-light conditions for real-time facial recognition and as
providing critical video evidence should a theft occur.
Because it had installed surveillance cameras at site access
points, the project trailer and equipment containers, MCM was able to identify
a family member of an employee stealing tools. "A lot of theft in the
industry is still inside jobs, and simply installing a surveillance system will
go a long way toward deterring employees from theft when they know they’re
being watched," Martinez said. "In this case, the family member
didn’t know we had a camera system, and we were able to catch them in the
act."
Sensing movement, projecting strength
Until last year, MCM was losing an average of $150,000
annually in stolen equipment and tools. With 200 pieces of heavy equipment
across 16 job sites in Florida, the general and civic contractor last year
invested in a job site motion-sensing platform that sends reports to project
supervisors' and managers' smartphones when it detects a disturbance. This
year, the company forecasts its theft-related losses at just $20,000.
"We’ve gotten very big on security technology as a
result," Martinez said. "It requires an investment, but we reap the
benefits also, as our losses are seeing a considerable change."
MCM uses a Wi-Fi enabled sensor array from Westerville,
OH–based Tattletale Portable Alarm Systems to monitor project trailers, storage
containers and all ingress/egress points, sending an alert the moment movement
is detected on the jobsite. While the system has offered MCM a plug-and-play
solution for jobsite monitoring around the clock, simply having the system
visible and known to would-be thieves is the greatest deterrent, according to
Martinez.
CNY Group's Colao agrees. "Fortunately, we have not had
many incidents," he said, crediting his firm's use of the RFID badging
system. "The threat of having surveillance and controlled access in and of
itself does a lot to deter activity."
Heavy tech for heavy equipment
When thefts do occur, losses incurred by AEC companies can
be expensive, particularly when heavy equipment is involved. According to the
most recent data tracked by the NCIB, stolen heavy equipment is recovered only
23% of the time, with sources interviewed for this story reporting greater
numbers of thefts occurring on longer holiday weekends and in the winter
months, when active job sites are unattended. The NCIB data indicates a higher
volume of thefts overall during the summer months, when job sites tend to be
most active. Tractors, loaders, mowers and backhoes are stolen most often, with
brands including John Deere, Kubota, Bobcat, Caterpillar and Toro perennially
favored by thieves.
"The threat of having surveillance and controlled
access in and of itself does a lot to deter activity."
"Geo-fencing is nothing new, but it is much more
affordable now because the cellular cost has gone down," Martinez said.
"Once you geo-fence a piece of heavy equipment, it gets triggered and you
know right away it's probably being stolen." Although false alarms do
sometimes occur, his team was able to recover an $80,000 backhoe from a theft
in process thanks to geo-fencing. "[That] paid off our investment in the
equipment and technology for three years," he said.
Protecting networks, protecting people
With security technology and job sites increasingly Wi-Fi
and network dependent, the next job site security frontier will likely be
cyberspace. Already, construction management firms and technology providers are
taking steps to protect the job site from hackers.
"Mesh networks have emerged as a resilient and very
secure technology for operating distributed surveillance, heavy equipment and
even drones in rugged environments and climates," said Don Gilbreath, vice
president of media services at Rajant, a wireless mesh network provider based
in Malvern, PA.
Distributed mesh radio networks were developed more than 30
years ago by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency and evolved quickly
in the post-9/11 era to provide self-reliant, self-launching communications
systems. Today, mesh networks are being deployed successfully in mining and
agriculture to provide full device connectivity and data transfer in
data-sparse areas. "In those applications, the trucks keep rolling, the
network stays together, and everyone has everything from email to video to
equipment telemetry data," Gilbreath said.
In New York, CNY Group has also taken steps to harden job
site network security. In addition to monitoring bandwidth usage in real time
to detect improper usage and access, the firm has invested in cybersecurity
insurance for its home office as well as all of its job sites.
Cyber insurance kicks in where commercial general liability
policies typically drop off, covering damages wreaked to networks and IT
systems by hackers. It also covers third-party liability, including the breach
of confidential corporate and personally identifiable information. While costs
depend on factors including policy coverage and premiums, cyber security
policies can help to stem losses from unauthorized access, viruses, malware,
hackers and even operator error, and they otherwise act as a rider to
commercial liability coverage.
Whether in cyberspace or in the dirt, effective job site
security technology should help construction teams with prevention, detection
and recovery, but apprehension should always be left to law enforcement.
"If you do see something suspicious at a job site or an alarm gets
triggered, don’t go in there yourself — call the police," Martinez said.
"At the end of the day, you could easily turn a minor theft into a major
accident."
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