Cannabis Facility Security and Evidence Planning
Build a security design from the licensed operation, jurisdiction-specific requirements and real inventory workflows—not a generic camera count.
Select the complete system, not one headline feature
Match devices, software, licensing, infrastructure, retention, integrations and support to the operating requirement before finalizing the design.
Operating zones, people and risk
Confirm the license type, approved premises, state and local rules, regulator interpretations and operating procedures before design. Map people and inventory from receiving through cultivation or production, storage, retail, waste and transfer. Requirements differ substantially by jurisdiction and license, so public guidance must not claim a universal retention period or camera layout.
Discovery should identify protected areas, users, schedules, response procedures, privacy expectations, existing equipment and the party who will administer the finished system. Product claims only become useful after they are translated into measurable coverage, capacity, availability and response requirements.
- License/premises/jurisdiction
- Inventory and people workflows
- State/local rule review
- Incident and outage procedures
Layered security and response design
Layer credentials, visitor control, video, intrusion, duress and door hardware around policy and regulatory zones. Design camera purpose, field of view, lighting, frame rate, resolution, retention and export from the applicable requirement and investigation need. Protect recording, network, power and time sources and limit administrative and evidence privileges.
Coordinate network addressing, PoE or low-voltage power, pathways, environmental ratings, mounting, door or camera interfaces and backup power. Verify exact model compatibility and supported software before ordering; similar product names can conceal different capacity, license or integration limits.
- Zone-based access and visitor control
- Requirement-driven video design
- Protected storage/network/time
- Restricted evidence privileges
| Control layer | Design question | Acceptance evidence |
|---|---|---|
| Licensed activity | Cultivation, manufacturing, storage, testing, retail or delivery functions and approved premises. | Premises/workflow map |
| Controlled inventory | Receiving, vault/storage, processing, waste, sales, returns and transfer points. | Coverage and role tests |
| Regulatory evidence | Camera placement, image quality, retention, export, timestamps, access logs and alarm records as required. | Compliance evidence sample |
| Operations and exceptions | Employees, visitors, vendors, emergencies, outages, maintenance and incident preservation. | Scenario and exception log |
Commissioning with real operating scenarios
Test employee and visitor access, deliveries, inventory transfers, controlled storage, after-hours alarms, duress, video search/export, timestamp, audit trail and approved power/network interruption. Verify the required views under day, night and grow-light or reflective conditions. Document blind spots or rule conflicts for licensed management and regulator resolution.
Use named administrators, least privilege and multifactor authentication where supported. Establish backup, update, health-monitoring and escalation ownership. Firmware and software should come from the manufacturer portal after compatibility and release-note review, with rollback or recovery prepared before change.
- Inventory and access scenarios
- Day/night/special-light views
- Search/export/audit evidence
- Power/network recovery
Governance, records and lifecycle
Deliver premises zones, camera purpose/views, access roles, alarm points, retention calculations, storage health, time synchronization, tests, evidence procedure and exceptions. Assign regulatory change review, credential lifecycle, daily or periodic system checks, export authorization, incident hold, firmware and recovery. Keep precise security details restricted.
Acceptance should test normal use, denied or alarm conditions, loss of network or power, notification, audit history and administrator recovery. Deliver protected configuration records, licenses, serials, diagrams, test evidence, support links and clearly owned exceptions.
- Premises/view/role records
- Retention and health evidence
- Regulatory-change owner
- Incident hold and lifecycle
How we plan and deliver the work
The final design depends on site conditions, existing systems, client policies and the selected manufacturer or platform.
Discover
Document people, assets, workflows, risks and existing systems.
Design
Select the supported architecture, devices, licenses and integrations.
Install
Stage, label and commission through controlled changes.
Validate
Exercise operating scenarios and deliver lifecycle records.
Information to gather before design
Good decisions are easier when the project team starts with complete operational and technical information. The following items help reduce assumptions, change orders and avoidable return visits.
- Operational use cases and response
- Device and software compatibility
- Power, network and physical interfaces
- Licensing, identity and cybersecurity
- Acceptance, support and lifecycle
Frequently asked questions
These are common planning questions. A site-specific answer should be confirmed during discovery and design.
Is there one national cannabis camera-retention rule?
No. Verify the current state, local and license-specific requirements for each premises.
Can an installer certify regulatory compliance?
The licensee and its qualified advisors retain compliance responsibility; installation evidence supports their review.
Why test under grow lights or display reflections?
Unusual lighting can reduce usable identification or activity detail.
Who should export incident video?
Named, trained users following the licensee’s authorization, preservation and disclosure procedure.
Manufacturer software, firmware and technical files remain on the manufacturer’s official website. We do not mirror firmware files locally.
Discuss a commercial security project
Tell us about the doors, buildings, users, existing equipment, operational requirements and desired completion date. We will help organize the right discovery and design conversation.