Council to vote on body cams for Vancouver police as critics raise concerns about privacy, cost - Action News
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British Columbia

Council to vote on body cams for Vancouver police as critics raise concerns about privacy, cost

Vancouver city council is set to vote on a motion to outfit Vancouver police officers with body cameras by 2025, a move thatcouncillors with ABC Vancouver say will fulfil a campaign promise to improve public safety in the city while addressing concerns about transparency and accountability in policing.

Civil rights advocates warn widespread use of body cams could put chill on political protests

A GoPro camera is seen on the chest of someone wearing a high-visibility vest, with a police officer and a parkgoer in the backgroud.
A member of the Vancouver Police Department wears a chest-mounted GoPro camera as he oversees the takedown of a tent city in downtown Vancouver on Oct. 16, 2014. (Jonathan Hayward/The Canadian Press)

Vancouver city council is set to vote on a motion to outfit police officers with body cameras by 2025, a move thatcouncillors with the ABC Vancouver party say will fulfil a campaign promise to improve public safety in the city while addressing concerns about transparency and accountability in policing.

The motionbrought forward by Coun. Lenny Zhouwould direct city staff to research the cost of the project, including the price of body-worn cameras and the data storage required to implement such a policy.

"This is an evidence-based approach. People want evidence-based policymaking, and this is all about the evidence," said Zhou.

"Everyone benefits from this policy."

A 2018 CBC investigation found that B.C. had the highest rate of police-involved deaths per capita in the country. Body-worn cameras have been promoted as a way to decrease police violence and increase transparency in investigations and are supported by families of some who have died as a result of police brutality.

But an emerging body of research on the use of body-worn cameras suggests that while the cameras come at a significant cost,they donot resultin significant changes in behaviour among either police officers or the public.

OneCityCoun.Christine Boyle said she won't be voting for the motion and will call for the city to track the outcomes of the policy, which is expected to pass.

"I can understand the police wanting video from their perspective. Unfortunately, in city after city, we see inconsistency with the footage if it's being turned on or offor difficulty accessing the footage when it's needed. So there are a lot of challenges in the implementation that hinder it being a useful tool," said Boyle.

"I, of course, want us to be making decisions and investments in solutions that make a difference to improve public safety and transparency.From the large body of research I've read on the subject, this isn't a solution that gets us there."

Cost of proposal unknown

Neither ABC Vancouver's original campaign promise nor the motion set to be voted on has a concrete budget. If passed, city staff would study the cost of the cameras and the data storage system that would be needed.

Toronto police are currently spending$34 million over five yearsto equip over 2,000 police officers withbody cameras. The VPD hasover 1,450 front-line officers, according to its union.

Vancouver police have requested an additional $20,000 in next year's police budget to implement a pilot project to study the effectiveness of body-worn cameras.

Zhousaid the city could also look at alternative funding options, including asking for support from the province. Public Safety Minister Mike Farnworth has expressed support for a similar pilot project undertaken byDelta RCMP.

Zhou also said the cameras could eventually be cost-saving measures, citing the legal and administrative costs of investigations.

Dozens of people hold up signs reading 'Defund the VPD' and 'All Black Lives Matter', among other signs, at a giant rally.
Protest signs at an anti-Black racism rally in downtown Vancouver call for the defunding of the Vancouver Police Department. Body-worn cameras have been promoted as a way to decrease police violence and increase transparency in investigations. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

Vancouver police said in a written statement to CBC that"we've looked at body-worn cameras in the past, but it's always been prohibitive due to the costs of purchasing and maintaining equipment, as well as data storage."

"There are other challenges that need to be addressed, including privacy concerns for people who are recorded but have not committed a crimeand the ability of Crown counsel to process and disclose evidence gathered during criminal investigations," the statement reads in part.

The chief director of the Independent Investigations Office of B.C. (IIOBC), the civilian-led agency that investigates police incidents ending in serious injuries or death, has in the past said he believesbody cameras should become part of the police uniform, saying the footage would help with investigations.

A report byIIO staff reviewed 71 investigations and foundfootage from cameras would have potentially helpedresolve93 per cent of thosecases.

Potential 'chilling' effect on political action

Meghan McDermott, the policy director for the B.C. Civil Liberties Association, said she believes no level of government has properly studied the consequences of deploying technology that films people in public and would be managed by police.

"What's really at stake here is our ability to be free without being recorded by the state. There's a real potential for people's private information to get recorded, to get sucked up into a server somewhere and then have extra technology layered on top of it, for instance, facial recognition technology," said McDermott.

"We also are very concerned about it having a chilling effect on people's willingness to protest or join a protestand what they may be willing to do in public spaces if there's a police officer there."

There are currentlyfew policies in B.C. dictating how the data from body-worn cameraswould be stored, though B.C.provincial policing standardsstipulate that data should be stored for at least a year if it is not part of an ongoing investigation.

At the moment, they also prohibit the "indiscriminate" use ofbody-worn cameras on all police calls. Instead, officers have the discretion to switch them on "where violent or aggressive behaviour is anticipated or displayed."

If implemented, itwould be the first widespread use of body-worn cameras among front-line officers in B.C.