Ottawa police could soon wear body cameras, but not everyone's convinced - Action News
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Ottawa

Ottawa police could soon wear body cameras, but not everyone's convinced

As Ottawa's police union laudsa proposal in its recent budget to outfit the force's officers with body cameras, one expert warns the technology won't do much to change the culture of policing.

$400K item in budget for 'digital information and evidence management' tech

Police urge people to move back as they work to clear Rideau Street during a large protest last spring. The Ottawa Police Services Board is proposing to spend $400,000 on technology that includes body cameras, but one expert is skeptical. (Justin Tang/The Canadian Press)

As Ottawa's police union laudsa proposal in its draft 2023 budget to outfit the force's officers with body cameras, one expert warns the technology won't do much to change the culture of policing.

The budget unveiled last month proposes to spend $400,000 onwhat the Ottawa Police Services Board calls "digital information and evidence management" technology.

That could include body cameras, which the budget claims wouldboost trust in the police force, help investigate complaintscomplaints about officerbehaviourand provide the "best evidence."

"It will [lead] to transparency and accountability. It will improve the interactions between police and members of the public on a day-to-day basis," said Matthew Cox, president of the Ottawa Police Association.

Ottawa police have advocatedfor body cameras for more than a decade, said Cox, a self-described "big supporter" of the technology.

But issues such as the cost ofdata storage have always gotten in the way, he told CBC Radio'sOttawa Morning.

Already in other cities

If the spending is approved, Ottawa's police force would become just the latest in Canada to be equipped with the technology.

Toronto police began wearing body cameras in 2020, while Vancouver city council approved a planlast year to have officers outfitted with cameras by 2025.

Despite arguments thatcameraswill enhance accountabilityand make the public feel more safe, there'slittle scholarly evidence suggesting that's the case, said Kevin Walby, anassociate professor in criminal justice at the University of Winnipeg.

Walbycitedameta-analysis essentially, a study analyzing previous studies published in 2020 by researchers in Australia and the U.S. that concluded body cameras had no "consistent" effect on thebehaviour of police officers or citizens.

Kevin Walby teaches in the criminal justice department at the University of Winnipeg and has concerns with the growing acceptance of body cameras. (Jeff Stapleton/CBC)

Walby toldOttawa Morningthat the limited perspective of a camera worn on an officer's body isn't as valuable as video taken from a wider angle by bystanders.

Officers may also feel they can go "right up to the line" when they have to use force and often use more than is strictly necessary because they know the cameras will record their actions and they'll be vindicated, Walby said.

"They're tools of legitimation," he said.

"When police are in crisis, when police are feeling all of these forms of resistance from the community, when the community is actually calling for defunding of police then police turn to these body cameras, because they allow them to have a little bit more of a budget line."

'Better than no video at all'

Walbyalso notedthe presence of body cameras failed to avert the beating death of Tyre Nichols, a Black motorist who died in Januaryafter a confrontation with Memphis police officers during a traffic stop.

But Cox toldOttawa Morninghe believed the cameras were integral in the fiveofficers being fired and charged with second-degree murderas quickly as they were.

And while body cameras may not capture the entire scene,images recorded by bystanders can also be manipulated, he argued.

"I think picking up some video is better than no video at all," Cox said."And that's presently what we have right now, is no video."

The public can still weigh in on the budgetthrough a questionnaire,or offer comments directly at the board's Feb. 27 meeting. Council's final vote on the budget is slated for March 1.