Leading maker of body cams disputes Montreal police cost estimates - Action News
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Montreal

Leading maker of body cams disputes Montreal police cost estimates

In a report presented to Montreal's public security committee Friday, the SPVM says outfitting officers with body cameras would be expensive and wouldn't help build trust with citizens. But the leading manufacturer says police cost estimates are overblown.

Body-camera test run shows no boost in citizens' trust, no increase in transparency, SPVM tells city

Stefan Schurman, Axon's regional manager in Canada, told Montreal's public security committee Friday the SPVM's cost estimates for equipping its officers with body cameras are way off. (Simon Nakonechny/CBC)

In a report presented to Montreal's public security committee Friday, the Montreal police service (SPVM) says outfitting officers with body cameras would be expensive and wouldn't help build trust with citizens.

However, a leading manufacturer of body camerasis disputing the SPVM's cost estimates.

The 215-page reportclaims equippingsome3,000 police officers with body cameraswould cost $17.4 million over five years.

The program would then cost another $24 million annuallyto run, given the labour and equipment costs involved, the report concludes. That amounts to four per cent of the SPVM's annual operating budget.

"It would be a very costly undertaking to equip all police officers with these cameras and to manage the data that would be generated by these cameras," said the chair of the public security committee, Alex Norris.

"We're talking in the hundreds of millions of dollars in the coming decades, just in operating costs."

However, U.S.-based Axon, the company that provided the SPVM with body cameras for its year-long pilot project, says those estimates are way too high.

Axon has outfitted police in cities ranging from Los Angeles to London.

StefanSchurman, Axon's regional manager forCanada, told the public security committee that costs are far lower than described in the report. As well, he said,video processing is not as time-consuming as the report suggests.

He said his company wants to sit down with theSPVM and re-examine the cost estimates.

Much larger police forces than the SPVMare able to manage such programs at a fraction of the cost, he told CBC after the meeting.

"In reality, we can outfit 3,000 SPVMofficers with all of our hardware, all of our software, and storage for anywhere between $6.5 million to $16 million," Schurman said.

A person poses wearing a police body camera.
In a year-long pilot project, 78 SPVM officers wore body cameras. Nine out of ten said they felt as if they were under surveillance. (Submitted by Montreal police)

He said the city's pilot project did not take full advantage of the available technology.

The report concluded the SPVM would have to hire another 200 staff to manage the camera data. However,Schurman said the system islargely automatic, allowing data to be sent directly to prosecutors.

No manual activation required

The report also raised a concern about officers having to manually activate their body cams, saying that in an emergency or in a dangerous or unpredictable situation that presents a logistical challenge.

But cameras can be fully automated to turn on in certain situations, Schurman explained,such as when an officer draws a firearm.

"They shouldn't have to worry about activating their body camera in the heat of the moment," he said. "Providing that kind of technology takes the guessing out of the equation."

Body cameras haveproven to be an effective evidence-gathering tool, Schurmansaid, andsuspects, when facing video evidence, are more likely to plead guilty.

This actually reduces paperwork and, in turn, expenses, he told the committee a point that doesn't seem to have been factored into the SPVM'scost estimates.

Responding to Schurman's comments during the committee meeting, the co-manager of the SPVM pilot project,PascalLacquement,said he spoke with London's police department and learned officers only activate cameras 40 per cent of the time.

Lacquement said this was an issue during the Montreal pilot project, as well.

He said the cost estimate includes not just the purchase price for the body cams, but investment in infrastructure and training.

The report also notes uniforms would have to be modifiedfor the body cameras.

The head of Montreal's public security committee, Coun. Alex Norris, says he's not convinced equipping Montreal police officers with body cameras would be worth the expense. (CBC)

As far as operational costs go, Lacquementsaidthere are particular steps police must follow when processing footage, which don'tallow for a fully automated system.

Norris explained those steps are in place toprotect investigative techniques and privacy.

"After spending all that money, we would only havefragmentaryvideo evidence because there all sorts of rules that require police officers to stop filming under certain circumstances," he said.

"I think we have to question the cost-benefit ratio involved. Are we really getting real benefit from spending all that money? That's the question we have to ask ourselves."

Citizens' trustnot boosted

During the pilot project, camera-equipped officerswere sent intothe Metro system and into some boroughs, while others wore them during road safety patrols.

In itspresentation Friday, the SPVM said the "results do not clearly demonstrate the three objectives of the pilot project."

Those objectives were to boost public trust, transparency and the safety of officers.

Nine out of ten officers said they felt as if they were being watched and that the cameras were an invasion of privacy. Many fearedthe recordings would be used against them, the report says.

Perez pushes for camera usage

The leader of the opposition Ensemble Montral, Coun. Lionel Perez, says watching police is, in fact, the entire point of body cameras.

"It's to ensure that there is in fact someone watching over," he said.

He said the cameras would help establish greater trust with police, he said.

"We think all these facts demonstrate the necessity to go forward," Perez concluded.

It's time for a "culture change," he said.

With files from Jay Turnbull and Simon Nakonechny