Many a homeowner resting safe and secure has been awakened by the deafening sound of his or her home's security system. "It scared me half to death," says Ann Marie Sutherland of Martinsburg, West Virginia, recalling the ear-piercing sound that woke her from her sleep. She lived alone in a newly built home. "The monitoring center verified that the alarm was triggered by entry through the garage door," Sutherland recalls. "There were no footprints in the snow, no sign of forced entry, no perpetrator, no answers." Luckily for her, it was a false alarm. Although installing an alarm system in your home is certainly beneficial (homes with an electronic security system are roughly two to three times less likely to be burglarized than homes without one), false alarms have stretched police resources thin, according to the International Association of Chiefs of Police. In fact, most alarm calls made to police are false. "False alarms are very rarely caused because of faulty equipment. They are most often triggered by users who forget to lock windows and doors that are then blown open by the wind," says Stan Martin, executive director for Security Industry Alarm Coalition in Frisco, Texas. "Or they open a door to let the dog out, forgetting that the alarm is on, or leave a motion detector on with an animal in the house." The bottom line is that everyone who will operate the system should have thorough training, says Martin. The question of how to make the system (which includes the relationship between the security industry, consumer, and law enforcement) more effective remains open. A coordinated effort among local, government, and business entities in the alarm service industry have devised the Model States Program in an effort to reduce the number of false alarms. States like California, Illinois, Florida, and Washington have tested the program. The following solutions were recently introduced nationwide: Enhanced call verification, which requires the alarm company to attempt to contact a homeowner at more than one telephone number before dispatching the police call. Martin says this has resulted in a 50% decrease in false alarm dispatches over a six-month period. Requiring consumers to pay an annual registration fee that will allow the police department to track the number of dispatches to an address and bill the homeowner for excessive use. Fines vary from state to state. Some states charge $100 after the fourth false alarm and other states fine the homeowner in incremental stages with each occurrence. In extreme cases, some alarm companies subcontract from private security firms to alleviate direct police involvement. "This increases the amount paid for monitoring from $5 to $10 to as much as a couple hundred per month," says Martin. CHOOSING A HOME SECURITY SYSTEM When it comes to professionally installed home security systems: Studies show that homes with an electronic security system are roughly two to three times less likely to be burglarized than homes without one. It is said that most burglars are inexperienced and are simply looking for an easy opportunity, but lack the patience to pursue breaking into a home that has deterrents. When selecting an electronic security system, contact the National Burglar & Fire Alarm Association (www.alarm.org; 301-585-1855) or your state's burglar and fire alarm association for a list of member companies in the area. Other resources include your local police department's crime prevention department, state licensing agencies, consumer protection agencies, and the Better Business Bureau. If you've got, it use it. Did you know that many of the homes that have been burglarized didn't have their security systems turned on? While consumers spent $18.7 billion on security system installation and monitoring in 2001, of the 3 million burglaries that occurred in the United States during that time period, the FBI estimates losses were $3.3 billion -with an estimated average value of $1,482 per offense for residential burglaries. Response time in emergency situations is vital. After your alarm is triggered, the monitoring center calls you to make sure that you are not being harmed. If they don't get you or you are in need of assistance, they call a 911 dispatcher. In turn, he or she calls the state police, depending on where you live.