Security Devices in High Demand for A/C Units

June 27th, 2011 | No Comments | Posted in Home Security

http://abclocal.go.com/wtvg/story?section=news/local&id=8213542

TOLEDO, OH (WTVG) — Air conditioning thieves are targeting Toledoans. Police say the thieves are stealing them from homes, churches and businesses. As now, security devices to keep the thieves away are in hot demand.

One homeowner says she’s fed up with copper thieves stealing her air conditioning unit. She says it was stolen twice this month. “I was coming out the back and I heard something go shhhhh. He was on the side of the house trying to get it again and I called the police. They caught him over there on Sherman.”

She rents her home. She did some research and learned her Habitec Home Security Alarm could be hooked up to her air conditioning unit so thieves can’t walk away with it.

The president of Habitec, John Smythe, installs alarms all over northwest Ohio and parts of Michigan. He says he’s heard several stories about thefts in Toledo.

Smythe says there’s an inexpensive way to protect your unit. First, you need an alarm system. He says, “After that we install, basically, it’s a contact and we run the wire all the way up the way it goes into you home and then we mount this device inside the air conditioning unit to the ground so in order to steal the unit they either have to cut through the wire or they would have to pull the unit, which would disconnect and send an alarm to us.”

The alarms cost $99 and up, which he says is a lot cheaper than footing the bill for a new unit that would cost you more than $3,000. That’s why this woman encourages homeowners to take steps to keep thieves away.

(Copyright ©2011 WTVG-TV/DT. All Rights Reserved.)

From ABC13: Habitec Home Security Systems

April 18th, 2011 | No Comments | Posted in Home Security

TOLEDO, OH (WTVG) — Everyday, about 10 homes are broken into throughout Toledo and the break-in rate across northwest Ohio has risen steadily over the past couple years.

As a result, the home security business has been booming.

Burglary victim Debra Bailey advises, “Watch your stuff. Lock your doors.”

Bailey’s life changed forever when someone broke down her door. The mother of two, who recently lost her job, had just received her tax refund. It was stolen, along with jewelry and some of the popular toys bought for her children.

Bailey says, “I was crying. I was devastated because we just lost our jobs. We just lost all of the money that we were going to pay our house payment off on.”

This isn’t the first time someone’s broken into Bailey’s home, but she wants it to be the last. It happened early in the afternoon, while most people are at work. Habitec Security president John Smythe says that’s when most burglaries happen.

Technology has made it easier to have a pair of eyes on your home all the time. Smythe says the internet has changed everything. A new inexpensive solution is an internet camera, which allows you to see what’s going on inside your home from anywhere in the world.

Smythe says, “You can view your home live, record up to 100 videoclips, a ten-second live video. It sends it to your home and email and it really is not that much money to do those types of things.” Monitoring fees are about $10 a month. And the videos can be used to help police identify criminals.

There are cheaper solutions for personal safety, too. A driveway monitor costs $40 and will warn you whenever someone pulls up.

If you can stomach the costs, there are sophisticated camera systems and smart pad alarms that interact with a cell phone. Smythe told us that in the past “really, to invest in a camera system, it was going to cost you a couple thousand dollars. It’s not quite that bad anymore.”

It could be worth the price, if it prevents you from living through the heartache Debra Bailey is coping with now.
(Copyright ©2011 WTVG-TV/DT. All Rights Reserved.)

Source

Home Security Tips – ABC 13 Video

October 29th, 2010 | No Comments | Posted in Home Security, Security Tips, Videos

Source: http://abclocal.go.com/wtvg/video?id=7752816&syndicate=syndicate&section=

Toledo Area Sees Rise in Use of Home Surveillance

September 7th, 2010 | No Comments | Posted in Home Security, Video Surveillance

Habitec Security Featured in the Toledo Blade Concerning Home Security Cameras

By JULIE M. McKINNON
BLADE STAFF WRITER

Maybe you want to deter burglars with unobtrusive yet visible cameras outside your home, or at least provide police with recorded evidence to help catch criminals.

Perhaps you want to check in on your elderly mother while you’re at work. Or maybe you want to ensure your children aren’t messing with the gun safe or playing unsupervised around the backyard swimming pool.

Those are some reasons growing numbers of local residents are installing video-security systems as prices have fallen in the last couple of years. Fear of rising crime also plays a part in the increased use of home security surveillance systems, and the technology is being tooled for homeowner use, local installation companies say.

Toledoan Amy Licata had a $700 system with two outdoor cameras installed by Guardian Alarm Co. on her family’s house last week; one camera is trained on the backyard, the other the front. The cameras, which record whenever motion is detected, will pick up activity outside both of the Licatas’ children’s bedrooms, too.

“I always worry more about the kids more than anything, so I wanted to make sure they were safe,” Mrs. Licata said.

Home systems using digital video recorders maintaining footage a couple of weeks have been around for a while, but, even at half the price of two years ago, they can cost thousands of dollars. The advent of cheaper Internet protocol cameras systems, starting at less than $500 installed, has led to more residents adding video-security systems, said officials at Habitec Security Inc. in Sylvania Township.

Habitec has a secure Web site where residents can view live Internet camera feeds through smart phones and computers, a service that starts at $10 a month per camera.

The cameras can record short clips posted to the Web site when motion is detected or an alarm is triggered, and text messages or e-mails can be sent to homeowners, company officials said.

“People are getting more and more interested in security,” said John Smythe, Habitec president. “People are more interested in seeing their homes when they’re away.”

Added Pat Ehrsam, service manager at Habitec, of an IP camera home surveillance system: “It’s very simple. Anyone can operate it … Video is just becoming more and more a part of our lives.”

Officials at both Habitec and Guardian, a Southfield, Mich., firm with a Toledo office, said their main market for residential use remains alarm systems.

But numbers for home video surveillance systems are growing, and they are popping up beyond upscale homes, they said.

Surveillance systems areabout 10 percent of Guardian’s residential business in the Toledo area, up from about 1 percent five years ago. The company installs seven to 10 home video surveillance systems a month in the Toledo area, said David Goldstein, president.

Customers are not fazed by monthly surveillance fees that can run $60 for multiple cameras, which is higher than those for alarms, Mr. Goldstein said.

“People are willing to pay two to three times as much to watch their homes than to secure them,” he said.

A number of factors play into prices and monthly fees for video surveillance systems, including the type of equipment, number of cameras, how video is recorded and stored, and other services. Cameras can be fixed on one spot, for example, or have the ability to be panned around by a resident checking a room.

A surveillance system with two Internet-viewing cameras can be installed for as low as about $300, with monthly fees of roughly $25, and will make snippets of footage available on the Internet. More expensive DVR systems with multiple cameras, which typically start around $1,500 to $2,000 and roughly $40 monthly fees, record a couple of weeks of footage on the home equipment and also can be monitored through the Internet.

Mrs. Licata, the Toledo mother of two, said she and her husband had considered getting a video surveillance system for a while, and Guardian’s $35 fee includes full maintenance along with Internet access to check live feeds. Costs have come down, and their older child, 2-year-old Luca, having learned to to open doors was another reason to get a system installed, she said.

“It’s just for safety,” Mrs. Licata said. “It gives me that peace of mind.”

Honeywell International Inc., which offers various security systems, has doubled sales of home video surveillance equipment in two years. Overall numbers still are small, but declining prices for cameras and the proliferation of smart phones have helped make systems attractive, said Gordon Hope, general manager of Honeywell’s AlarmNet business. “It’s very early, very early,” Mr. Hope said. “But we are certainly seeing an increase in activity.”

At Video Security & Surveillance Systems in Toledo, commercial installations are about the same, but business in residential systems has doubled within the last two years as prices have dropped to less than $1,000, said Michael Wegren, owner, who would not give specific figures.

“It has been on the rise for probably the last year and a half,” he said.

Even some renters have put in video systems with the permission of property owners, although most systems are installed in middle-class and upper-class houses, Mr. Wegren said.

For some customers, crime is not the prime reason for having video surveillance systems installed. They use them to keep track of elderly relatives living with them or to check on children, some installers said.

“There is some demand for it coming recently from [increased] vandalism or people who have small children, especially people who have swimming pools,” said Mike Latscha, vice president of Home Guard Security Systems in Whitehouse.

Habitec has installed some video surveillance systems at house construction sites in an effort to prevent theft of copper and other building supplies, said Mr. Smythe, the company president. Second homes are another popular place for installing video surveillance systems, he said.

Sometimes the systems catch activity outside a homeowner’s purview.

In June, video surveillance cameras at a South Toledo home captured some images of the theft of a neighbor’s 9-year-old shepherd, lab, and Rottweiler mix. The dog survived two 45-caliber bullet wounds during the incident, and two people have been charged with animal cruelty.

Do-it-yourselfers also have alternatives.

For example, Toledo-area Best Buy stores in the last month have started carrying indoor security camera systems, which cost about $300 and allow monitoring through the Internet. Best Buy also carries indoor/outdoor security camera systems on its Web site.

Dan Bollin, president of Toledo’s Eagle Creek Builders and Transtar Electric, said he has been outfitting houses for eight years with structured cabling wiring, which allows for installation of video surveillance systems.

Such systems still are most common in houses starting at $350,000, he said.

“More people are more concerned today with security,” Mr. Bollin said.

http://www.toledoblade.com/article/20100801/BUSINESS10/7310366/-1/BUSINESS

Habitec Appears in Security Trade Publication

Habitec grows in Michigan with Citizen buy
By Martha Entwistle – 03.04.2010

TOLEDO, Ohio — Habitec Security, which calls itself the largest independent dealer in Ohio, this week acquired Citizen Security Systems of Carlton, Mich.

“It’s a small company in southeast Michigan that’s been in business for ten years and has a couple hundred account base,” said John Smythe, president of Habitec.

Chris Ruelle, the former president of Citizen Security, has joined Habitec as a sales consultant. Habitec is in the process of transferring all monitored alarm systems to its monitoring station here.

Habitec has about 13,000 accounts and is roughly half residential and half commercial. It has 90 employees and two branch offices, in Traverse City, Mich., and Columbus, Ohio. The company was founded by Smythe’s father, Jim Smythe, in 1972. John Smythe took over as president after his father passed away five years ago.

Smythe said the company’s made about 100 acquisitions over the years, including five since he took over.

While Habitec’s commercial business has slowed considerably in 2009, its residential business has done very well. “Our security systems installations on an annual basis was up more than 15 percent,” Smythe said. “And our cancellations stayed low.”

And for 2010? “We expect small [overall] growth again,” he said. “While the margins on commercial are thin, we’re finally starting to see some jobs close in the initial part of this year. We’ve won some bids and we weren’t the lowest bidder. They were sold, instead, on our company.”

Smythe said he’s had valued guidance over the past five years from some veteran alarm company owners who serve on his board including Mel Mahler of ADS, and John Bourque of HB Alarm. Mahler and Bourque were close friends of Smythe’s father, and they’re all Honeywell First Alert Professional dealers.

At the most recent First Alert Professional conference, Smythe gave some guidance to other FAP dealers in a seminar on Internet marketing, something he’s a big proponent of.

“We’re doing a lot more of that than we used to,” he said. Through search optimization on his site, Google ads and Google click campaigns he’s “generating way more leads than through other means … we get five to six leads a day through the Internet marketing, which is a lot for us.”

Habitec Launches Total Connect

January 13th, 2010 | 3 Comments | Posted in Home Security, Press Releases

Habitec Security Total ConnectAccess your Security System Anytime, Anywhere! As technology brings the world closer together, the need to feel connected is a reality today. With Habitec’s Total Connect Service you can now utilize the internet to control your security system in real time.

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Protect Your Family Over the Holidays

December 17th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted in First Alert, Home Security, Videos

Protect your family over the holiday season and always with a home security system from Habitec Security.