Call & Times

Some police department­s dump bodycam programs amid high costs

- By KIMBERLY KINDY

When East Dundee, a tiny suburb of Chicago, ordered body cameras for its 17 police officers, Terry Mee, the police chief at the time, told local reporters the devices would promote “officer safety” and “positive interactio­n with the public.”

But before a single incident could be recorded in the village of 3,000 people, Mee retired, and the new chief, George Carpenter, persuaded the Village Board in February to cancel the program, arguing that the $20,000 annual fee for the cameras and video storage couldn’t be justified amid budget concerns.

Body cameras “are wonderful for winning public trust,” Carpenter said. “But it’s expensive.”

In recent years, after a spate of fatal police shootings sparked nationwide protests, politician­s and community activists seized on police body cameras as a way to restore public trust. Although the cameras were widely adopted, many department­s – especially in smaller jurisdicti­ons – are dropping or delaying their programs, finding it too expensive to store and manage the thousands of hours of footage.

The police department in Wahoo, Nebraska, ended its program in November after a new state law required video to be stored for at least 90 days, causing the annual price to spike to $15,000 – a big cost for a force of just five officers. In Arlington County, Virginia, the Police Department decided not to use body cameras after a pilot project revealed an estimated annual cost of $300,000.

And city officials in Madison, Wisconsin, in November rejected a proposal to spend $104,000 on a body-camera pilot program. While cost was the primary concern, activists and city officials also worried that the videos might be turned over to federal immigratio­n officials and used to detain illegal immigrants.

“A call for transparen­cy is not the same thing as accountabi­lity,” activist M Adams told the Madison Common Council. “If we as a community don’t have the power to interpret the footage, if we as a community don’t have the power to make a decision about the outcome of the footage, then it makes no difference how much footage that there actually is.”

Most department­s that have ended body-camera programs are in smaller jurisdicti­ons; Axon, a body-camera manufactur­er, said every one of its clients that has canceled contracts cited costs.

“The easy part is buying the body cameras and issuing them to the officers. They are not that expensive,” said Jim Pasco, executive director at the National Fraternal Order of Police. “But storing all the data that they collect – that cost is extraordin­ary. The smaller the department, the tougher it tends to be for them.”

Though urban areas with high crime rates are often viewed as having the greatest need for police body cameras, a Washington Post database that tracks fatal shootings by police shows that such occurrence­s are more statistica­lly prevalent in small communitie­s. Of the 1,800 department­s that have reported a fatal police shooting since 2015, nearly 1,300 were department­s with 50 or fewer officers.

About half of the nation’s 18,000 law enforcemen­t agencies have some type of body-camera program, with many still in the pilot stage. Some outfit patrol officers with the cameras, while others require everyone to wear a camera, including police chiefs. No government agency or industry group tracks the number of department­s that have ended their body-camera programs.

Costs have spiked in recent years in some regions of the country because of new state laws that require long-term storage of video footage. One of the first police agencies to stop using body cameras was in Jeffersonv­ille, Indiana, where police ended their yearold program in 2016 after state lawmakers voted to require storing the videos for at least 190 days.

At the time, at least seven other states had similar storage laws, according to the National Conference of State Legislatur­es. Now, at least 14 states have passed laws that set storage requiremen­ts.

In 2016, the U.S. Justice Department surveyed police department­s that had not yet begun using body cameras, seeking to identify possible deterrents to the programs. Seventy-seven percent cited costs, including for data storage. Thirty-nine percent cited privacy concerns, including times when domestic violence victims and the mentally ill are captured on video during police response calls.

The Bureau of Justice Assistance, a division within the Justice Department, offers grants to help agencies finance their programs, and 339 grants worth nearly $70 million have been awarded since 2015.

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