Why does the county need a false alarm ordinance?

The Sheriff approached the Loudoun County Board of Supervisors in 2004 and requested an ordinance be put in place to help decrease the number of false alarms because they take deputies away from other essential duties and delay response time to true emergencies. In 2005, deputies responded to nearly 10,000 alarm calls; over 99% of those alarms were false.

Show All Answers

1. What is a false alarm?
2. Why does the county need a false alarm ordinance?
3. Have similar false alarm ordinances been successful elsewhere?
4. How much is the registration fee?
5. When does my registration expire?
6. Is a contact person someone other than myself?
7. What happens if I don't register?
8. What is the fee schedule and how does it work?
9. What happens if I don’t pay the false alarm fee?
10. What does no-response mean?
11. When should I contact my alarm company?
12. Who gets charged if the alarm company employee sets the alarm off?
13. What do I do to get the alarm / monitoring company to call me first?
14. If the power goes off, is that considered a false alarm?
15. How can backup batteries cause false alarms?
16. How can I reduce the chance that my battery will cause a false alarm?
17. Will a deputy always respond to my alarm?
18. Can my alarm registration be transferred to another person or alarm site?
19. How often should I have my system checked?
20. What do I do if I accidentally set off the alarm system?
21. I bought a house that has an alarm system installed. What do I need to do?