During the public‑comment portion of Tuesday’s council meeting, several citizens raised issues ranging from library programs to police surveillance and a housing demolition dispute.
Mason Grimit, speaking for the Sunflower Privacy Alliance, urged the city to release Flock license‑plate camera audit logs and access records from Jan. 1, 2024, to present so the public can verify who has searched the system and whether outside agencies have been given access. Grimit framed the concern as constitutional, citing Supreme Court decisions and warning that a dense network of plate readers could create a searchable history of movements that implicates Fourth Amendment protections.
"This technology can transform otherwise normal observations into something constitutionally significant when collected at a massive scale," Grimit said, urging council members and the public to investigate the company and its oversight.
The mayor responded by pointing to the Wichita Police Department’s online transparency page and a Flock transparency portal as the public entry points for related records.
Separately, Civil Strong told the council his house had been demolished without prior notice, leaving him homeless. He said he had not received any letter or phone call before demolition and called for restitution and answers. Council Member Ballard told the speaker she had been responding and that staff would continue follow‑up.
Other public comments included a youth who credited Wichita Public Libraries with helping him win a state reading award and local business leaders thanking the council for recognizing small businesses.
Action: Council asked staff to continue follow‑up with records requests and individual cases and pointed attendees to the WPD transparency portal for immediate information.