Pensacola Councilwoman joins ACLU effort for community control over police surveillance

Local officials and community leaders in 11 cities across the country, including Pensacola Councilwoman Jewel Cannada-Wynn, joined together today to announce a plan to bring transparency to the acquisition and use of local police surveillance technologies. The measures, which are influenced by a set of guiding principles released by a diverse coalition of 17 national organizations today, include mandating city council approval and a public hearing process that maximizes community input into surveillance technology decisions.

The ordinances being proposed in the 11 cities are intended to require that the purchase and deployment of surveillance technologies in local communities be subject to public debate, rather than occur in secret.

“We need an ordinance that governs, not just a policy,” stated Cannada-Wynn, who plans to propose a measure that allows the city’s law enforcement to address crime but also makes it clear when and how local law enforcement monitors the community. “Policies change through simple discussions; ordinances require government transparency, accountability, and public input. If Pensacola is to continue to be a leader in the region and even the state, we need an ordinance.”

“The use of surveillance by local police has been spreading unchecked across the country without regard for the communities that they purport to serve,” said Anthony D. Romero, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union. “Today communities and their local elected officials are taking action to address the disparate impact, financial burden, and threats to civil rights and liberties posed by invasive surveillance technologies.”

The first wave of cities announcing legislative efforts today are:

  • Hattiesburg, Mississippi
  • Madison, Wisconsin
  • Miami Beach, Florida
  • Milwaukee, Wisconsin
  • Muskegon, Michigan
  • New York, New York
  • Palo Alto, California
  • Pensacola, Florida
  • Richmond, Virginia
  • Seattle, Washington
  • Washington, D.C.

The guiding principles behind this surge of legislative action, which is expected to be replicated in an increasing number of cities across the nation, are as follows:

  • Surveillance technologies should not be funded, acquired, or used without express and specific city council approval.
  • Local communities should play a significant and meaningful role in determining if and how surveillance technologies are funded, acquired, or used.
  • The process for considering the use of surveillance technologies should be transparent and well-informed.
  • The use of surveillance technologies should not be approved generally; approvals, if provided, should be for specific technologies and specific, limited uses.
  • Surveillance technologies should not be funded, acquired, or used without addressing their potential impact on civil rights and civil liberties.
  • Surveillance technologies should not be funded, acquired, or used without considering their financial impact.
  • To verify legal compliance, surveillance technology use and deployment data should be reported publicly on an annual basis.
  • City council approval should be required for all surveillance technologies and uses; there should be no “grandfathering” for technologies currently in use.

This locally-led, multi-city effort was developed in partnership with highly-diverse national partner organizations.

A list of national partners and additional resources information can be found here: www.communityCTRL.com

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