Vail USD integrates smart sensors with Arcules cloud VMS for swift, coordinated response to vaping, reducing incidents by 90%
Vail Unified School District (USD) in Southern Arizona serves students across 24 schools, maintaining a strong commitment to student safety and wellbeing throughout their educational facilities. The district has invested significantly in security infrastructure, with over 300 security cameras deployed across their campuses and environmental sensors installed in key locations.
When faced with the growing challenge of student vaping, Vail USD launched a pilot program at Cienega High School to test an innovative integration between their existing environmental sensors and Arcules™ video surveillance as a service (VSaaS). Leveraging Arcules' open platform architecture, the district was able to seamlessly integrate their diverse mix of cameras and environmental sensors, without requiring wholesale infrastructure replacement.
With vaping on the rise in schools across the U.S., Vail Unified Schools faced a growing health risk. They needed to respond quickly and protect students in areas where traditional surveillance wasn’t appropriate. Bathrooms and locker rooms became blind spots where vaping, THC use, and disruptive behavior were escalating. School leaders needed a solution that could detect these incidents in real time and enable rapid, coordinated responses—all while maintaining student privacy.
The challenge was not just vaping detection – it was enabling a swift, coordinated response to protect student health.
Starting with a pilot at Cienega High School, Vail USD was able to connect their existing HALO Smart Sensors and Hanwha cameras through Arcules cloud-based VMS. Arcules’ open platform architecture made this seamless integration possible without requiring costly infrastructure replacement. Vail USD administrators worked with DH Pace, a certified integrator, to configure the optimal solution.
The three-part system—Detect, Respond, Verify—provides administrators with the tools to act immediately while preserving privacy in sensitive zones.
Now when vaping, THC, or other environmental changes are detected, the HALO sensors trigger a mobile alert via Arcules. With one click, staff members can pull up the alert from their mobile device and view corresponding live video footage from adjacent areas for incident confirmation.
This integration enables staff to respond within minutes rather than hours or days, while providing the visual evidence needed to effectively enforce campus policy and maintain student safety.
The results have been transformative, nearly eliminating vaping in school bathrooms and locker rooms at Cienega High School. The mobile-first approach allows Middleton and her team to immediately verify and respond to incidents from anywhere on campus through their smartphones. Students have noticed the change too. Many comment that the restrooms are now less crowded, reporting they feel safer, and the spaces are being used for their intended purpose.
This case shows how a thoughtful combination of detection, video integration, and rapid response tools can redefine campus safety. The district’s approach preserves privacy while enabling meaningful intervention, setting a model for schools across the country facing similar challenges.
Next Steps: District-Wide Expansion
With the pilot’s success, the district is now evaluating how to expand the solution across additional campuses. The scalable architecture of the Arcules platform, combined with the flexibility of the sensor system, makes district-wide deployment both feasible and cost-effective by leveraging existing infrastructure.
Looking ahead, the solution offers strong potential for future development. Opportunities include expanding sensor event workflows, and integrating with additional systems such as access control. These enhancements could help build a more comprehensive, proactive safety infrastructure that evolves with the needs of each school site.