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EJS Security Ltd
is a family owned and run business. The owners
and senior
staff have in excess of 40 years of
combined experience in all sectors of the venue
security arena.
Carl James our Managing Director formally owned
and ran Safe Guard Security successfully
managing the security of several local town
centre public houses. In 1997 the new company
was formed with name change. Carl was joined by
cousin Greg James who became the Operations
Director allowing Carl and the project
development team to expand the business further
into the venue security sector while extending
their geographical theatre of operations.
Now covering entertainment venues in 5 counties,
EJS has a permanent staff of over 150 security
personnel employed in the entertainment venue
security branch of the business. With a rapidly
expanding static security branch adding more
staff to the workforce Carl and Greg are quietly
confident of the future for EJS Security.
EJS has always had the ethos of prevention
rather than curing issues. All our staff a
trained and sent on regular refresher courses in
Health and Safety, First Aid, Fire Prevention,
Licensing Law, Restraining Techniques, Narcotics
& the Law, General Law as pertaining to likely
circumstances in their job, Rights of entry to
premises and all forms of Anti-Discriminatory
Practice. All personnel must be proficient in
these disciplines before they commence active duty
with EJS Security.
EJS Security always works closely with the local
authorities and the Police. This allows a
transparency of operations as well as ironing
out any potential kinks in the smooth running of
your entertainment venue and any potential
causes of disturbance in the venues
neighbourhood.
We understand that occasionally there will be
issues with customers who do not understand
their own limits. We endeavour to sort these
issues out as discreetly as humanly possibly ,
in the event of a patron needing physical
intervention all of our staff are trained in the
use of modern restraining techniques and never
use any more force than needed to subdue the
patron. |
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