Cameras to keep watch on waters
Newport Beach lifeguards are hiring some extra eyes to watch their
water.
The eyes belong to a handful of digital security cameras scheduled
to be installed at several spots along the beach this year.
With seven miles of beach to watch, the cameras will provide
Newport lifeguards with a better vantage point, especially during the
off-season when guards are not in towers, said Lifeguard Capt. Eric
Bauer.
A test camera has already been successfully installed at the
Balboa Pier and another is expected to go in at the Wedge within
several weeks, Bauer said.
The camera broadcasts a live picture onto the Internet via a
wireless connection; the lifeguards can zoom in anywhere they want to
get a closer look. The Internet connection has been provided to the
lifeguards by Seven Seas Internet, a Laguna Beach-based wireless
Internet provider.
“It’s a definite enhancement to their safety capability,” said
Charlie Smith, Seven Seas’ director of marketing.
Smith said he’s been working on the project for six years. It
makes sense that the technology of wireless cameras be used to
increase public safety, Smith said.
On a wireless laptop inside lifeguard headquarters at the Newport
Pier, Bauer can pull up a real-time video of the Balboa Pier with the
click of the mouse.
The cameras will allow lifeguards to monitor conditions when the
guards are not on duty in towers. Newport Lifeguards only put staff
in towers for a portion of the year, during the busy summer months,
Bauer said.
At the Wedge, where the next camera is set to be installed, the
camera will enable lifeguards to enforce the black ball rule, which
prohibits surfing until the end of October, Bauer said.
But the cameras aren’t intended to replace lifeguards.
“Cameras can’t make rescues -- cameras can’t treat people,” Bauer
said. “It’s another tool in our arsenal to help us be more effective
in treating people.”
An Anaheim man drowned in front of an unmanned lifeguard tower
over Labor Day weekend. A rip current pulled him into deep water.
Lifeguard supervisors had taken the guard at Tower 28 off duty
moments earlier due to calm surf and small crowds at the beach that
day.
“The likelihood of preventing something like that before it
happens goes up,” Bauer said.
Bauer stressed the importance of swimming near an open lifeguard
tower and checking with the lifeguard before going into the water.
Before the digital camera, lifeguards also tested an analog
television camera at the Balboa Pier, but found the digital camera to
be a better option.
“It’s more user-friendly,” Bauer said.
Also, the digital cameras will be significantly less expensive
than the analog cameras, he said.
The analog cameras would cost roughly $16,000 per site, versus the
$4,000 to $5,000 per site the digital cameras will cost, Bauer said.
If all goes as planned, the cameras will be positioned at the
Wedge, 15th Street, 44th Street, 54th Street, the Santa Ana River
Channel and at lifeguard headquarters, Bauer said.
Lifeguards have fielded some public concern about privacy issues
involving the cameras.
Footage from the cameras will only be used for security purposes,
Bauer said. The lifeguards have a firm privacy policy and camera use
will be supervised.
“We want people to realize that it’s something that’s going to
help them in their public safety when they’re in need,” Bauer said.
Additionally, the cameras can also give the public a chance to
keep an eye on the lifeguards.
“If they see we’re doing something inappropriate on our cameras,
the public will be our watchdog,” Bauer said.
Smith from Seven Seas Internet says he hopes the lifeguard cameras
will generate more public interest in wireless cameras.
“The benefits far outweigh the privacy issues,” Smith said.
He envisions private yacht owners someday being able to broadcast
live pictures of the Newport Beach Christmas Boat Parade to friends
across the country.
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