Civic News
Crime / Public safety / Technology

Philly surveillance cameras: Controller says 32% work, Nutter says 85%

The Controller's Office said that out of the 31 cameras it randomly sampled, only 32 percent worked. The Nutter administration said the Controller's report was wrong and that 85 percent of the city's cameras work.

There seems to be some widespread disagreement about how many city surveillance cameras actually work.

The Controller’s Office said that out of the 31 cameras it randomly sampled, only 32 percent worked. The rest of the cameras either didn’t work or had problems that distorted the images, like “water spots inside the camera dome” and “film and dirt on the camera’s exterior.” Read the report here [pdf].

It’s important to note that the city’s 202 cameras make up just over 10 percent of the video feeds that the Philadelphia Police Department have access to. Ninety percent of the nearly 1,800 cameras the PPD monitors are SEPTA cameras.

In his report, Butkovitz championed Baltimore’s video surveillance program, noting that it has “97 percent of its cameras functioning at all times” and that “Baltimore has 7.5 times more cameras per person than Philadelphia, even though it has almost 900,000 less citizens.”

But not everyone believes the city should be in the business of owning its own cameras. It’s more cost effective for the city to tap into video feeds owned by other organizations, like SEPTA and the University of Pennsylvania, said Mike Vidro, the staffer from the Office of Innovation and Technology who oversees the PPD’s video surveillance program.

“If it was up to me, the city wouldn’t own any cameras,” Vidro said in an interview with Technically Philly last February.

Companies: Philadelphia Police Department
Engagement

Join the conversation!

Find news, events, jobs and people who share your interests on Technical.ly's open community Slack

Trending

Philly daily roundup: East Market coworking; Temple's $2.5M engineering donation; WITS spring summit

Philly daily roundup: Jason Bannon leaves Ben Franklin; $26M for narcolepsy treatment; Philly Tech Calendar turns one

Philly daily roundup: Closed hospital into tech hub; Pew State of the City; PHL Open for Business

From lab to market: Two Philly biotech founders on AI’s potential to revolutionize medicine

Technically Media