Coast Guard to Install Camera System on Beaumont, Texas, Port Property

Coast guard will use surveillance cameras for a new vessel traffic system The Beaumont Enterprise
Oct. 28, 2004
2 min read

Port of Beaumont commissioners approved a lease to allow the U.S. Coast Guard to station cameras on the port's property for a vessel traffic system.

The Coast Guard will pay the port $300 a month in exchange for housing the two cameras, said Chris Fisher, the port's executive director.

The lease is for 10 years, bringing the total to $36,000.

The traffic system is supposed to improve channel security and transportation efficiency, he said.

It acts similarly to an air-traffic control system, providing the Coast Guard with the ability to track ship traffic, said Lt. Ian Bird, a Coast Guard spokesman.

Ports in New Orleans and Houston already use the system.

Setting up the system along the Sabine-Neches Waterway is in its infancy, Bird said in a telephone interview.

There is no timetable for completion or a total project cost available yet, Bird said.

Commissioners also authorized additional funding for two security projects.

After six weeks into building a new command and control center at the port, the estimated $398,000 project has proved to be more costly than expected.

An extra $3,500 will be needed, Fisher said.

Grant money totaling $230,000 will pay for the bulk of the nine-month project to replace a small guard shack at the entrance to the port's wharves.

Adding razor wire fencing to the port's Orange County property cost about $109,000, all of which came from grant money, he said.

The original cost was estimated at $97,500, but commissioners agreed to spend more money for timber mats to be placed on the property. The mats will allow easier access onto the property, Fisher said.

Sign up for SecurityInfoWatch Newsletters
Get the latest news and updates.

Voice Your Opinion!

To join the conversation, and become an exclusive member of SecurityInfoWatch, create an account today!