Chief Smith asked the council's permission to present a short, potentially graphic clip and then described how modern body-worn camera systems work and why the department is exploring them. "Body worn cameras provide accountability and transparency for officer actions," Chief Smith said, outlining technical features such as real-time encrypted uploads, GPS tracking, pre-buffering up to two minutes and automatic activation when lights are used, a weapon is drawn or in a crash.
Chief Smith cited several studies and local results he said showed sharp drops in complaints and use of force with camera deployment; he said a University of Cambridge study showed a 93% drop in complaints (as described to the council) and a Rialto, California study showed a 50% reduction in use-of-force events. He emphasized that the equipment and cloud-based storage carry recurring costs and that policy work would be needed to address schools/SROs and juvenile privacy issues.
City staff said there are two major vendors they have looked at and that some federal grant opportunities (and past COPS grants) can substantially defray capital costs. The chief estimated that a full system (cameras, in-car integration, cloud storage and management subscription) could be in the range of $700,000 per year depending on chosen scope; staff said some grant awards have been as large as $1.0.2 million in other jurisdictions.
Council members asked for additional details: which current software and services the package would replace, how neighboring cities have used these systems, exact ongoing storage/retention costs, and which officer groups would wear cameras. Chief Smith said he expects uniforms to be covered and that SRO usage and juvenile privacy would require explicit policy development and redaction capacity.
Council directed staff to keep pursuing grant opportunities and to return with cost comparisons and recommended policy language before making a procurement decision.