IACP, NSA back SIAC's model alarm ordinance

Nov. 7, 2018
Best practices developed by industry and law enforcement

The Security Industry Alarm Coalition (SIAC) on Tuesday that two of the nation’s leading public safety associations, the International Association of Chiefs of Police (IACP) and National Sheriffs’ Association (NSA), have passed resolutions in support of members utilizing the Model Ordinance for Alarm Management and False Alarm Reduction developed in partnership between law enforcement and the electronic security industry through SIAC.

IACP approved a resolution at its 2018 Annual Conference “encouraging the use of this 2018 Model Ordinance…and all of the best practices.” The NSA also passed a resolution that “recognizes the need for and value of strong enforcement recommended in this Model Ordinance to achieve the desired reduction in alarm dispatches experienced by police agencies…”

The recently updated model ordinance has been the result of close collaboration between SIAC and law enforcement for the past 20 years. While the ordinance has been endorsed at the committee level, this is the first time that both IACP and NSA have endorsed the ordinance on a national level.

“By working together we have been able to significantly reduce unnecessary police dispatches while at the same time maintaining the police response to alarms,” said Stan Martin, Executive Director of the SIAC. “Alarm systems reduce crime and protect homes, businesses, places of worship and schools. We want to make sure criminals know police are responding. It is an important component to protecting people and property and reducing crime.

“Every best practice in the model ordinance has been tried and tested for effectiveness in reducing false alarms and the resulting dispatches,” added Martin. “In addition to IACP and NSA, fifteen State Chiefs of Police organizations across the U.S. use some form of this model and recommend its use to chiefs within their respective states.  When all recommendations within the model are followed and strictly enforced dispatch reductions of 40-50% can be expected with 85% of the permitted systems in any given year not requiring even one law enforcement dispatch.”