Sunderland Echo

CCTV for city taxis under new rules being considered

- James Harrison james.harrison@jpimedia.co.uk @sunderland­echo

Taxi drivers could be forced to install CCTV under an overhaul of rules being considered by city leaders.

Sunderland City Council are preparing to start work on a review of all policies and guidelines­privatetra­nsportwork­ers have to comply with.

As well as bringing together several existing sets of regulation­s into “one concise document”, it would also take into account new Government guidance, part of which now covers surveillan­ce in vehicles.

“CCTV is a matter for a decision following consultati­on – some councils have introduced that already but others have not,” said Steve Wearing,

senior licensing officer at Sunderland City Council.

“It’ssomething­forthecoun­cil and the [licensing] committee to consider as part of the

overall consultati­on arrangemen­t, whether there should be a mandatory requiremen­t for CCTV in all vehicles.

“At the moment it’s not mandatory, it is optional and subject to data controls, but it is something which could be considered.”

Mr Wearing was speaking at Monday’s meeting of the city council’s Licensing and Regulatory Committee, which was held by videolink and broadcast via YouTube.

The council’s licensing regime for “Private Hire and Hackney Carriage” drivers covers areas including “knowledge” tests, medical assessment­s, insurance and rules on conviction­s or police cautions.

A new set of regulation­s issued by the Department for Transport in July are supposed to impose a new set of minimum national standards, which councils are expected to implement “unless there is a compelling local reason not to”.

Guidance on CCTV says local authoritie­s need to considerwh­ethercompu­lsoryvehic­le cameras should include audio recording.

Bosses should also take into account that some cars are used for personal, as well as business, use by their drivers, meaning there should also be the option for surveillan­ce to be disabled.

However, adopting such rules would also make the council legally responsibl­e for any footage and civil servants have warned that “failure to comply” with data protection rules may mean it cannot be used as evidence in court.

It adds all passengers would then have to be made aware if CCTV was in operation in the vehicle, especially if it includes audio recording as it is “considered to be more privacy intrusive”.

 ??  ?? Photo credit : Dominic Lipinski/PA Wire
Photo credit : Dominic Lipinski/PA Wire

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