Chicago Sun-Times

CITY UNDER SURVEILLAN­CE

ALDERMAN WANTS SECURITY CAMERAS RECORDING INSIDE, OUTSIDE LATE- NIGHT BUSINESSES WHEN ‘ DISPROPORT­IONATE AMOUNT OF CRIME’ OCCURS

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN City Hall Reporter Email: fspielman@ suntimes. com Twitter: @ fspielman

Chicago stores open overnight would be required to have surveillan­ce cameras both inside and out between the hours of 2 a. m. and 5 a. m. — and share those recordings with the Chicago Police Department — under an anti- crime crackdown that has drawn the ire of retailers. Currently, interior and exterior surveillan­ce cameras are required, only of those Chicago bars with 4 a. m. liquor licenses. Ald. Tom Tunney ( 44th) wants to broaden that Big Brother umbrella to make the same demand of “late night retail licensees” open between the hours of 2 a. m. and 5 a. m.

Digital recordings would have to be “maintained for not less than 30 days and made available” to the Chicago Police Department “no less than twelve hours after an incident.”

Those same merchants would also be required to prominentl­y display a “24- hour telephone number of a local contact” for emergency use.

“If there’s an incident and police need to come into your establishm­ent, who is your emergency contact? Not the store clerk who’s there. Who is gonna be accepting responsibi­lity in case there’s an incident at this particular establishm­ent?” Tunney said.

Most retailers already have interior surveillan­ce cameras, but exterior cameras are rare. Installing them and maintainin­g the recordings would be expensive.

But Tunney made no apologies for the latest in a string of costly mandates.

“We believe that there is a disproport­ionate amount of crime happening in those wee hours of the morning,” the alderman said Thursday.

“If you want to open during all of those hours knowing that incidents of criminal activity is higher during those hours, you need to protect yourself and your business and make sure the place has cameras and that there is an emergency contact to work with the police department. And camera footage needs to be stored in case, on Monday morning, we find that there was an incident happening over a Friday or Saturday night and police were not immediatel­y called.”

Tunney, owner of Ann Sather restaurant­s, normally doesn’t go for government mandates. He rails against them knowing firsthand the price that retailers pay.

But he’s leading the charge for interior and exterior surveillan­ce cameras at overnight retail stores because there are so many of them that could be magnets from crime.

“You have Dunkin’ Donuts. You have 7- Eleven’s. You have some Walgreen’s. Some CVS [ stores]. You’ve got gas stations. You’ve got more than you think,” Tunney said, one day after introducin­g the ordinance.

Tanya Triche, vice president and general counsel for the Illinois Retail Merchants Associatio­n, said her members have seri- ous cost and liability concerns about any city mandate requiring them to, as she put it, “monitor police activity.”

“Many of them have cameras to monitor what goes on inside their establishm­ents. Obviously, they’re going to be liable for certain things. But when you start putting cameras on the street, that becomes private businesses doing the work of the city,” Triche said.

“Then, you have a question of, what are we gonna be liable for? What if the camera is not working and something happens outside on the street? What is the extent of our liability?”

Triche acknowledg­ed the struggle aldermen have in balancing the needs of businesses and residents. But she is hoping to devise a solution to Tunney’s security concerns that is “not legislativ­e and would not require cameras.”

Tunney has been on the warpath about a drop in police manpower in a Town Hall District plagued by robberies and burglaries that runs contrary to a promise made in exchange for his vote for the largest property tax increase in Chicago history. Ald. Tom Tunney

‘‘ WHEN YOU START PUTTING CAMERAS ON THE STREET, THAT BECOMES PRIVATE BUSINESSES DOING THE WORK OF THE CITY.’’ TANYA TRICHE, vice president and general counsel for the Illinois Retail Merchants Associatio­n “IF YOU WANT TO OPEN DURING ALL OF THOSE HOURS KNOWING THAT INCIDENTS OF CRIMINAL ACTIVITY IS HIGHER DURING THOSE HOURS, YOU NEED TO PROTECT YOURSELF AND YOUR BUSINESS.’’ ALD. TOM TUNNEY ( 44th), owner of Ann Sather restaurant­s

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