Cleveland activists urged city leaders Wednesday to end the city’s contract with Flock Safety and remove automated license plate readers from public streets, while residents in Chandler and Troy attended city meetings this week to oppose or seek stricter limits on Flock ALPR camera deployments and to demand transparent data access and retention policies. Cleveland officials are weighing a one-year extension to the Flock contract this week, and city council safety committees across municipalities are scheduling further reviews; Chandler police report 40 active cameras and a proposed $153,000 contract renewal on Thursday. Organizers including East Valley Unite’s Nathan Taylortaft and Flock No have called for removal, while Troy leaders announced a 60-day data review.
Prepared by Lauren Mitchell and reviewed by editorial team.
Flock Safety's ALPR cameras are popping up in cities like Cleveland, Chandler, and Troy. These cameras read license plates, potentially impacting your privacy. If you're concerned, check your city's contract with Flock Safety and voice your opinion at city council meetings.
Communities are pushing back against Flock Safety's ALPR cameras, demanding transparency and limits. The debate centers on privacy versus safety. Watch for updates on your city's stance. Worth forwarding if you know someone who values their privacy.
Law enforcement agencies and Flock Safety, whose investors include Andreessen Horowitz, benefit from ALPR deployment through investigative data access and contract revenue opportunities.
Local residents, particularly immigrant and Hispanic communities, along with privacy advocates, suffered increased concern over surveillance, data collection, retention policies and perceived targeting raised at multiple city meetings.
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