Can body cameras improve policing? The OPP wants to find out - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 06:56 PM | Calgary | -11.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
London

Can body cameras improve policing? The OPP wants to find out

Starting this month some provincial police officers in southwestern Ontario will start wearing body cameras to see if the technology makes police and the public safer.

Southwestern Ontario study to find out if technology should be used on broader scale

A police officer models a body-worn camera that will be used in an OPP study that will try to determine whether the technology can make police and the public safer. (OPP)

Starting this month, some provincial police officers in southwestern Ontario will start wearing body cameras to see if the technology makes police and the public safer.

The year-long study was announced bythe Ontario Provincial Police Tuesday morning. OPP also said Tuesday it would not release the findings of the study, when it concludes a year from now.

Traffic enforcement and emergency response officers, as well as uniformed officers with theHaldimand detachment, will start wearing the technology in plain view, starting Tuesday.

It means the officers who are participating in the study will turn the body camera on before arriving at the scene of a call for service or while interacting with the public,a statement said.Officers will turn the camera off once the call is complete.

The OPP said the technology is equipped with lights that visibly change colour when the camera is activated and officers have been trained to give people notice as soon as possible that their body-worn camera is recording.

The provinciallaw enforcement agency said it has conducted "a comprehensive review" of its policies and procedures around privacy when it comes to the technology.

"Procedures have been created to address potential privacy concerns and to ensure the security of the video once it has been recorded during the course of this study," the news release said.

The OPP hopes the technology will enable officers to collect better evidence, improve police accountability and transparency, while enhancing the safety of both police and the public.

Ontario Provincial Police have launched a pilot project on the use of body cameras for some of its officers. (OPP)

OPP spokesman Derek Rogers told CBC News in an email Tuesday, thebody cameras are also being used in the bedroom community of Caledonia, Ont., where police are trying to keep tensions between Indigenous protesters occupying two housing developments and the local townspeople at a minimum.

"The cameras may prove useful to ensure accountability and transparency and may have a positive impact in de-escalation," he wrote.

Rogers said the findings of the year-long study will be compiled in a report, but it will not be released to the public.

"The OPP generally does not release internal research or policy papers for officer and public safety reasons," he said.