The San Francisco Rules Committee on April 29 voted unanimously to forward to the full Board of Supervisors an SFMTA surveillance‑technology policy governing driver‑safety video analytics.
Suhail Warsi of SFMTA described the system as event‑triggered audio and video capture (examples: sharp turns, sudden stops, cellphone use) using cameras that record a short clip when predefined events occur. “It records…8 seconds before the event happens and the 4 seconds after that event happens,” Warsi said, describing a roughly 12‑second capture designed for incident investigation, operator training, infrastructure review and to identify safety improvements.
Warsi said the system is already in place on rubber‑tire vehicles and SFMTA is developing an RFP to expand it to light‑rail vehicles. Data storage and lifecycle details presented to the committee: staff access uses unique passwords, data are retained for 365 days and are deleted after that period; a vendor cloud is used with daily downloads to a local drive; de‑identified PDF reports summarizing events are kept longer for operational review. Warsi said SFPD, the City Attorney’s Office and the Public Defender may receive footage when requested; other external sharing requires a subpoena.
Committee members praised provisions intended to use the technology for training and to commend operators as well as for investigation. There were no public commenters on the item. Chair Ronan moved to forward the ordinance with a positive recommendation; the motion passed unanimously and the item will proceed to the full Board for consideration.