The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Sandy Springs will gain 99 cams to scan license plates

Deputy police chief says he’s heard no local concerns over privacy.

- By Ben Brasch ben.brasch@ajc.com

In a few months, something new will greet folks driving into Sandy Springs: a license plate reader camera.

A total of 99 new cameras will be placed around the entrances and main thoroughfa­res in the affluent city of 100,000 residents. The cameras scan license plates and alert police if vehicles are flagged as stolen or ofinterest in a criminal investigat­ion.

“Through a hot list of stolen vehicles or stolen tags or informatio­n that we load in ourselves on suspect vehicles, the informatio­n will be put into the database, and if the tag passes anybody’s reader, we’ll get notificati­ons,” said Deputy Chief Keith Zgonc with Sandy Springs police.

Zgonc said the city is still determinin­g where the cameras will go and how the program’s success will be measured. But he said the City Council’s decision Tuesday to spend $500,000 a year on the cameras will help him and his officers make the city safer.

Sandy Springs is joining other north Fulton County cities that have already made the license

p late cameras part of their crime-fighting tools.

Alpharetta signed a $67,000 annualcont­ractin July toput the plate readers on power poles around the city. Milton in late October signed a

deal with Atlanta-based license plate reader company Flock and Amazon-owned doorbell camera company Ring, allowing city police access to relevant resident data to solve crimes. After a heated debate centered on privacy, the Johns Creek City Council in September narrowly approved a deal with Flock and Ring.

Although officials in cities throughout metro Atlanta and the country are weighing how cameras help police reduce crime versus the effects of a surveillan­ce state, Zgonc said he hasn’t heard any local concerns over privacy.

“I think people get a little more nervous about surveillan­ce cameras than they do license plate readers,” he said. “... I think people are getting a little more used to hearing about the technology.”

According to a presentati­on given to the Sandy Springs City Council in mid-October, city police have made nearly 100 charges (two-thirds being felonies) and recovered six stolen vehicles since late June thanks to existing license plate cameras.

He said there have been privately owned cameras in the city for nearly nine years. Flock spokesman Joshua Miller said its cameras are already in 21 Sandy Springs neighborho­ods, but Flock doesn’t disclose the location or number of cameras for privacy reasons. He said the typical customer is a neighborho­od or homeowners associatio­n.

Zgonc said Sandy Springs has been slow to get its own cameras for a pretty simple reason: “Nobody wants additional poles up on the street.”

That’s why he was intrigued in 2018 with Georgia Power’s program to put the cameras from companies like Canada-based Genetec on existing power poles. Sandy Springs was ready to get 72 Genetec cameras but they held off after finding “Flock Safety had improved its technology and had begun specializi­ng in law enforcemen­t,” according to a city report.

The report added that Flock was also attractive not only because it had “a significan­t footprint” in the city’s neighborho­ods, but because Flock cameras are a third the price of Genetec’s devices. The city says Genetec’smoreexpen­sivepower pole cameras will be placed on roadswithf­asterspeed­sbecause they are better at reading vehicles going above 60 mph.

So the city settled on a mix, paying Flock $7,500 a month for 42 cameras and Genetec about $32,000 a month for 57 cameras.

“With the amount of cameras we’re putting in this year, if a stolen car enters the city, we’ll keep getting hits on that,” Zgonc said.

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