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Unisys is the top integrator in Canada PDF Print E-mail
Access Control - Features
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Wednesday, 15 August 2007 22:01

SP&T News is pleased to announce that our editorial advisory board experts have selected Unisys Canada as Canada’s Security Systems Integrator of the Year.


Unisys was nominated for a six-month, $835,000 field trial announced in July 2006 of biometric fingerprint and facial recognition technology for Citizenship and Immigration Canada (CIC) for processing temporary resident visa applications for students, workers and visitors and refugee claimants. Approximately 20,000 immigrants and refugees participated in the field trial.

The field trial involved processing biometrics information in several ways. Temporary resident visa-issuing offices at the Seattle and Hong Kong missions captured biometric fingerprint and photo data of visa applicants. This information was then forwarded to a central database at CIC national headquarters.

Also as part of the trial, ports of entry at Vancouver International Airport, Douglas and Pacific Highway B.C. land border crossings verified photo biometrics data and captured fingerprint data on participants and designated refugee intake centres collected biometric data. Finally, CIC headquarters evaluated biometric matching of facial recognition and fingerprinting for quality and accuracy by forensics experts.

Technology integrated into the system included the Unisys Enterprise Server, fingerprint scanners, bar code readers and printers, AIT passport readers, Visa printer and CIC enrolment and match review software. Unisys partnered with San Diego, Calif.-based Imageware Systems for the project.

“One of Citizenship and Immigration Canada’s roles is to improve the security of Canada,” states the submission. “CIC is considering using biometrics for people planning to immigrate or be temporary residents in our country. The six-month field trial was undertaken to assess the impact of facial recognition and fingerprint technologies on CIC, CBSA and temporary residents. The field trial will also help CIC assess the merits of making significant technology investments to gather and verify biometric data at visa offices and ports of entry.”

“By far and away it was an easy choice,” says SP&T News editorial advisory board member Peter Garnham of PG Security Associates in Brampton. “A well-written narrative of a project and how they were able to lead the integration of different products with foreign equipment and make it all work from different parts of the world.”

Fellow board member Ron Jagmohan, national technical manager for Honeywell Security and Custom Electronics in Woodbridge, Ont. cites four factors that determined his decision: Canadian content; the global reach of the project; new technologies employed, particularly biometrics and RFID, and the knowledge and expertise of the company involved. “It is very evident from the scope of this project that it requires a significant understanding of new and existing technologies to be able to pull it all together.”

Unisys Canada, also recently announced that it has been signed a contract to design a biometric access control system for Canada’s Port of Halifax and its 4,000 workers. Transport Canada and the port will fund the project.

“This is in compliance with the Marine Transportation Security Regulation requirement to authenticate a card holder as being the card owner, which then grants access to restricted areas and facilities,” says Gord Helm, manager, port security and marine operations, Halifax Port Authority. “The port and the Canadian government support this particular biometric technology.”

Unisys will design and develop the secure database containing the names of participating port workers. The port’s access control system will manage multi-level access control to permit entry to various secure facilities only to those individuals with proper clearances and approved access. The system would deny access to those who do not have appropriate credentials. The biometric is stored only on the individual card, not in the database, eliminating the possibility of the file being stolen or corrupted.

The system also controls exits. Workers must use the card and verify their identity when they leave an area into which the card granted them access. In an emergency situation, authorized individuals can override this requirement so as not to impede evacuation processes.

The Security Systems Integrator of the Year competition, which is sponsored by Anixter Canada, was launched in early January with a deadline for submissions on May 31. Judging of the nominations was done by SP&T News'  editorial advisory board. 

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