Privacy advocates are applauding the recent decision by
a key committee of the District of Columbia Council to eliminate
nearly $900,000 in proposed funding for consolidating the
operations of 5,200 city surveillance cameras.
Mayor Adrian Fenty unveiled the Video Interoperability for
Public Safety program a month ago to connect the city’s
surveillance cameras to a single network with an advanced
monitoring system to assist in prevention of and response
to crimes, terrorism and other emergencies. He requested the
$900,000 in funding for fiscal 2009.
But the D.C. Council’s Public Safety and Judiciary
Committee recently withheld $886,000 for the project and is
planning a public hearing later this month to examine the
proposal. Privacy groups, including the American Civil Liberties
Union and the Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC),
support those decisions.
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The privacy groups have questioned whether the cameras are
effective in preventing crime. They also have noted concerns
about the possibility for privacy and civil rights infringement
through the monitoring of political protests and rallies.
EPIC and the other groups have called for guidelines and
legislation to address the effectiveness, purpose and use
of the video surveillance; sharing and retention of the images
recorded; and oversight mechanisms.
“There are many unanswered questions about the Homeland
Security and Emergency Management Agency’s plans to
consolidate and centralize monitoring of thousands of video
surveillance cameras. These questions need to be answered
and proposed policies and procedures need to be prepared before
the council should consider funding any new network,”
states a May 9 letter from the ACLU, electronic privacy group
and Constitution Project. The letter is addressed to the city
council.
The mayor, in an April 8 news release describing the surveillance
program, said it would consolidate closed-circuit television
operations in nine city agencies into the homeland security
agency. The goal is an all-hazards system that operates around
the clock.
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