Blog

A high school on Long Island says it is among the first in the country to install new, state-of-the-art "smart lockers." Stacey Sager has the story.

BALDWIN, Nassau County (WABC) -- A high school on Long Island says it is among the first in the country to install new, state-of-the-art "smart lockers." Parcel Pick Up And Delivery

Installation work is underway at Baldwin High School in Nassau County, with completion expected with a few weeks.

Gone will be the decades-old combination lock design that required students to dial in three digits by hand.

They're being replaced with new lockers, equipped with integrated computer chips and linked to sensor networks, that open with the swipe of a student's smart card ID badge.

Baldwin says it is the first K-12 public school district in the country to make the changeover to the smart lockers.

More than half of the $900,000 cost was covered by state grant money.

School officials are hailing the security benefits of the new lockers, even as the installation work continues.

All the lockers can easily be opened or locked simultaneously with the click of a button if necessary, they say.

And students are now required to wear their ID badges at all times to open their lockers, another security benefit.

That will also help solve the problem of students not wearing their IDs. With the new system, they will swipe right into each classroom and teachers won't have to take attendance.

Students told Eyewitness News they are happy about the upgrade.

"We just get to use our IDs and just swipe it instead of having to memorize a locker combination..so it's a lot easier," senior Stephanie Pierre-Louis said.

MORE NEWS | Lincoln Square tree lit up for holiday season

* Send us a news tip

* Download the abc7NY app for breaking news alerts

Have a breaking news tip or an idea for a story we should cover? Send it to Eyewitness News using the form below. If attaching a video or photo, terms of use apply.

AccuWeather: Rising temperatures, fire dangers

'Definitely toxic': Indiana recycling plant fire could burn for days

Parcel To Drop Rutgers considering legal action to force faculty back to work