
The total award value (including options associated with FAR 52.217-8) is $1,435,721.56. The award decision was based on the Lowest Price Technically Acceptable (LPTA) selection method specified in the USCG’s Request for Proposal. Within seconds a match was made verifying the crew member was the person on board,” a USCG Boarding Officer was quoted as telling the company. “We checked the biometrics with 100 percent success. “P-SIG originally supplied the handheld biometric readers to the US Coast Guard starting back in 2009,” the company said. MOZAIC-ID is also a strong choice for the TWIC program, port facilities and other access controlled enforcement.” MOZAIC-ID is primarily focused for guard controlled perimeters or on the spot checking of credential owners in real-time. This will be preloaded and ready for on the fly verfications.

Using this mechanism, any installed copy of Read-a-Card can be enhanced to be able to read a site-specific format and return the relevant card ID data to other applications using its built-in keyboard wedge, file logging or direct integration APIs, without exposing the encoding scheme security data.The US Coast Guard (USCG) awarded Chesapeake, VA-based MozaicID, the biometrics division of Parroco Production Group, Inc., the total proposed price of $1,395,554.32 to purchase 250 handheld multimodal biometric readers to replace readers that are past the end of their service lives.Īccording to the company, its “preloaded MOZAIC-ID Smartcard Credential Software is capable of reading TWIC, CAC, PIV, PIV-I and other issued smart cards.

Read-a-Card provides the ability to decode customer-specific card numbering formats stored on MIFARE, DESFire and iClass cards, through the use of software plug-ins and optional hardware security modules (SAMs) for holding keys and other sensitive data. With the correct reader hardware, Read-a-Card can read most HID Prox and iClass card numbers in standard Weigand format, as well as card serial numbers from the full range of MIFARE, DESFire and other RFID technologies. Using Read-a-Card, systems that currently rely on barcode scanners can be migrated easily to contactless technology, and door access systems can be extended to enable card numbers to be read into different applications and databases.
