View allAll Photos Tagged Security
Extra security measures seen in pairs or groups as they stand guard within the COEX building, venue 2012 Nuclear Security Summit, Seoul, Korea, 25 March 2012
Copyright: IAEA Imagebank
Photo Credit: Dean Calma / IAEA
How to secure SSH login with one-time passwords on Linux
If you would like to use this photo, be sure to place a proper attribution linking to xmodulo.com
Opportunity to shape benefits system in Scotland.
People across Scotland are being given the chance to help shape the country’s first ever social security system.
We have an annual security summit (conference) at Google, and I've designed the t-shirts for attendees. This was this year's shirt.
Department of Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly visited Ottawa for a series of meetings with his Canadian counterparts on March 10, 2017. Read more about his trip at ca.usembassy.gov/joint-statement-public-safety-minister-g....
The implications of global peace are vast. People all over will gain a sense of security over their lives and property
Fukushima Daiichi: Two Years On
Debris from the upper levels of Unit 4 lies beside the building. The rubble as been cut away to prepare for construction of a new cover, so that fuel can be moved from the unit’s spent fuel pool to a common pool. Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant. 18 December 2012
Photo Credit: Gill Tudor / IAEA
SSG Carroll Perry (rt), Private Deiber Zepeda (ctr) and Specialist Jorge Mata (lt), all from 1-503rd, 173rd Airborne Brigade Combat Team, provide overwatch security while soldiers below prepare to walk through a village at one of the situational training events or STX lanes during the 173rd's Full Specturm Training Event being held at Hohenfels Germany. US Army Europe Public Affairs photo by Richard Bumgardner.
A very kind man who works in tough conditions, monitorring traffic in and out of Blue Water Island, the construction site of the ferris wheel.
JBR, Dubai, United Arab Emirates.
SPSOA Building Service Security Division
www.spsoa.org/#!spsoa-building-service-security-division/ca4
The most common jobs in facilities management are found in building service and security guard occupations. Building service and security guard positions in New York City are found in residential and commercial buildings, and public institutions, such as schools, airports and hospitals.
Over 160,000 New Yorkers are employed in building service and security guard occupations, making this one of the larger employment segments in the city.
Building Service Security Guards
As indicated in the table above, the NYS Department of Labor projects that the number of security guard positions will grow by 21% between 1998 and 2008. Note that this 1998 projection might turn out to be on the low side, given heightened security concerns in New York City. During the current
recession, the industry containing security guard businesses increased employment by 8.7% from December of 2000 (the peak month for total NYC employment) to January of 2003. In this period when NYC has lost nearly 6% of its total job base, the investigation and security services industry had
the largest employment gain (+3,500) of any private industry other than health, social or educational services.
Security guards in New York City made a median hourly wage of $8.46 in 1998, with the middle half of all workers earning between $6.75 and $12.39 an hour.
The most significant single employer of security guards is the real estate industry, which employs guards in commercial and residential buildings. In addition, over half of the security guards in New York City are employed by firms that provide contractual protective services throughout the economy
(public and private sector). In the Standard Industrial Classification system, these firms were included in the miscellaneous business services industry group.
This is significant in the sense that over half of the security guards in New York City do not work directly for the institution in which they are placed, but instead work for contractors who in turn place them in retail and other settings.
Commercial office buildings range in size from less than 1,000 to more than 1 million square feet. About 2,000 buildings in the United States(less than 1% of the total number) have more than 500,000 square feet of floor space, and about 7,000 (nearly 1%) have more than 200,000 square feet. The amount of space in these larger buildings is significant: nearly 30% of all commercial office floor space is in buildings with more than 200,000 square feet.
Potential Indicators of Terrorist Activity
Terrorists have a wide variety of weapons and tactics available to achieve their objectives. Specific threats of most concern to commercial office buildings include:
• Improvised explosive devices
• Arson
• Small arms attack
• Assassination/kidnapping
• Chemical/biological/radiological agent attack
• Aircraft attack
• Cyber attack
Terrorist activity indicators are observable anomalies or incidents that may precede a terrorist attack. Indicators of an imminent attack requiring immediate action may include the following:
• Persons in crowded areas wearing unusually bulky clothing that might conceal suicide explosives.
• Vehicles illegally parked near facility buildings or near places where large numbers of people gather.
• Unattended packages (e.g., backpack, briefcase, box) that might contain explosives.
• Suspicious packages and/or letters received by mail that might contain explosives or chemical/biological/ radiological agents.
• Evidence of unauthorized access to HVAC areas of a building.
Indicators of potential surveillance by terrorists include:
• Persons using or carrying video/camera/observation equipment in or near the facility over an extended period.
• Persons discovered with facility maps, photos, or diagrams with critical assets highlighted or notes regarding infrastructure or listing of personnel.
• Persons parking, standing, or loitering in the same area over a multiple-day period with no apparent reasonable explanation.
• Persons questioning facility employees off-site about practices pertaining to the facility and its operations, or an increase in personal e-mail, telephone, faxes, or postal mail requesting information about the facility or one of its
key assets.
• Facility employees inquiring about facility operations, equipment, assets, or security measures about which they should have no job-related interest.
• An increase in buildings left unsecured or doors left
unlocked, when normally secured and locked at all times
Greater Manchester Police’s Chief Constable Peter Fahy is joined by Inspector Andrew Sutcliffe at an event to celebrate over 1000 homes across Trafford having had their security improved as part of a six-month project.
Mr. Fahy thanked those involved in securing the 1041 homes at a special meting at the Force's headquarters on 20 May.
Under the Safer Homes scheme, police community support officers identified the vulnerable properties, surveyed them and highlighted any security issues. They then offered the homeowners the chance to have security devices fitted free of charge.
During the project, Timpson’s Locksmiths fitted many different security measures such including -
949 door chains,
298 door viewers,
201 tower bolts,
71 mortise bolts,
154 door locks,
317 window locks and
34 patio bolts
Each home was also given a pack containing crime reduction and fire safety advice as well as a discount coupon for the ‘How To Avoid Becoming A Target For Crime’ guide.
Participants were asked at the end of the project if they felt safer as a result of it. 83 per cent of those asked said that they felt more secure in their homes.
The Greater Manchester High Sheriff’s Police Trust funded the project via the Home Office’s Safer Homes fund.
Chief Superintendent Mark Robert of Greater Manchester Police’s Trafford Division said: “We always encourage residents to take care of their personal property and to keep it safe and through this campaign we can make sure we are providing the support they need to do this.
“We work in close partnership with other Safer Trafford Partnership members to make sure that Trafford is one of the safest places to live in Greater Manchester. Through schemes like this we can deter criminals and keep it that way.”
For more information about Greater Manchester Police please visit our website.
I went to get a burrito yesterday and as I pulled up to park, this security guard was writing his report of a car crashing in to Shear Cuts in Rohnert Park, Ca. The driver who backed in to the parking space, thought she was in drive when she put her foot on the gas pedal. No bodily injuries to the driver.
When a security guard falls asleep on the job is he risking job security? He woke up shortly after i took this. I think he could feel my prying eyes.
CBP Office of Air and Marine supports Super Bowl with aircraft to enhance security in and around the venue. photo by James Tourtellotte
02 September 2020, Dejan Jakovljevic, Deputy Director. Youth Committee's Digital Innovation Wednesday.
We make sure that our standards of service are enforced each and every time and there are no flaws whatsoever in the security we provide.
Visit us: www.eagleprotectivegroup.com/
Sign for the Security Elevator Company, 1640 Fairmount Avenue, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Alas this business looks like it's long gone.
shot for macro mondays theme security. real lazy setup - probably could have done much better with the harsh shadow if i spent more than 5 or 10 minutes on this but wutever. on camera 580exii in ettlii mode bounced off the wall behind the subject.
Opening night June 15, 2007 Beverly Hills
High and Dry, Smoke and Fog
a group show curated by Price Latimer
featuring work by:
Jason Adams, Mattia Biagi, Jennifer Celio, Deborah Fisher, Whitey Flagg, Adam Harteau, Cheryl Kelley, Michael Markowsky, Doug Martin, Blue McRight, Joel Morrison, Robert Rauschenberg, Robert Reynolds,
Ed Ruscha, Eddie Ruscha, Salvatore Scarpitta, Lola Scarpitta, Kim Schoenstadt, Christoph Schmidberger, Chloe Sells, Shelter Serra, Nikki Van Pelt and Jeremy Wagner
Free cocktails
Music by DJ Mike B.
269 N. Beverly Drive
Beverly Hills, CA 90210
High and Dry, Smoke and Fog is inspired by cars… the joy, the freedom, the mechanics, the dependence, the status symbol, the technology, the social responsibility, the sex appeal, the pollution, the speed, the danger, the commute, the traffic, the exhilarating road trip, the urban sprawl and the transportation conundrum. The artwork in this exhibition addresses the paradox of these topics; some works evoke it directly, some abstrusely. The work also illustrates the general human desire for movement and exploration, and how mankind’s pioneering, adventurous spirit has come to manifest itself today in our motor transportation. Particularly in Los Angeles – the American metropolis supreme – whose complicated relationship with cars, traffic and transportation is both fascinating and poignant. L.A. is the only major city that was entirely shaped by the automobile. In 1964, Marshall McLuhan said, “The car has become an article of dress without which we feel uncertain, unclad, and incomplete.” Currently, Los Angeles County is in the top ten dirtiest counties in the U.S. for air pollution.
Phantom Galleries LA is a Los Angeles County-based organization that transforms unoccupied storefronts and spaces into temporary art galleries. Exhibits are curated by local arts organizations, Los Angeles-based galleries, independent curators, and Los Angeles-based artists. The project gives artists an opportunity to exhibit their work, while promoting the creative community to a broader audience and keeping the area looking vital and culturally exciting. The spaces are lit and on view 24 hours a day.
High and Dry, Smoke and Fog is open by appointment, as well as the following Saturdays – June 16, June 23 and June 30 – from 11 am to 6 pm, and Sunday, June 17, 2007 in conjunction with the Rodeo Drive Concours D’Elegance, celebrating the art of California car culture.
For artist information and sales inquiries, please contact:
Price Latimer • 310.497.3667 • price@pricelatimer.com • www.pricelatimer.com
Ed Ruscha, Robert Rauschenberg, Joel Morrison
Courtesy of the Paul Rusconi Collection, Los Angeles
Salvatore Scarpitta courtesy of the Lola Scarpitta Collection, LA
Jennifer Cielo courtesy of Bandini Art, Culver City, CA
Deborah Fisher courtesy of Dangerous Curve, Arts District, CA
Blue McRight courtesy of Patrica Faure Gallery, Santa Monica, CA
Ed Rusha courtesy of Patrick Painter Gallery, Santa Monica, CA
Phantom Galleries offers a special thank you to the City of Beverly Hills Economic Development Office for their continued support and assistance in launching the Beverly Hills Phantom Galleries LA program. “In Beverly Hills we believe that a vital economy needs an active art and cultural core.” – Alison Maxwell, Director of Economic Development and Marketing for the City. For more about the City’s Public Art Program log onto www.beverlyhills.org.
For more information about Phantom Galleries LA, please contact:
Liza Simone • 213.626.2854 • liza@phantomgalleriesla.com • www.phantomgalleriesla.com
Georgia Army National Guard Soldiers from 3rd Battalion, 121st Infantry Regiment, maintain security presence in Centennial Olympic Park in Atlanta while assisting local law enforcement during protest demonstrations June 1, 2020. (U.S. Army National Guard photo by Sgt. Jordan Trent)
Original cover design for the anthology "It Came From Airport Security" - available now! www.lulu.com/content/1034596