Build us a body-worn camera with technology 'that doesn't fail,' Toronto police tell manufacturers - Action News
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Build us a body-worn camera with technology 'that doesn't fail,' Toronto police tell manufacturers

The Toronto Police Service says it wants its officers to wear body cameras, but says the current equipment isn't technologically advanced enough to be useful to the force. That's why police held an information session with various manufacturers Tuesday to lay out exactly what features the cameras need.

Cameras' batteries run out too quickly among other problems, Toronto police say

The cost of body-worn cameras for Toronto police officers is estimated at $51 million over a five-year span. (CBC)

The Toronto Police Service says it wantsits officers to wear body cameras, but says thecurrent equipmentisn't technologically advanced enough to be useful to the force.

That's why police held an information sessionwith various manufacturers Tuesday to lay out exactly what features the cameras needafter concluding a pilot project last year that equipped 85 officers with the cellphone-sizeddevices.

While the projectwas considered relatively successful, the force did not move forward in partnering with a manufacturer to outfit more officers.

"The reason we didn't select a vendor is because we felt that the technology, in its current state at the end of our project, would not do the things that we needed it to do," saidInsp.MichaelBarsky, who oversees the body camera program for TPS.

The single most pressing concern is battery life, Barskytold CBC Toronto. The two different camera models, made by different vendors, would run out of powerwithin a few hours of the start of anofficer's shift.

Another issue was how to manage the immense amount of data produced each day.Barskyexplained that a single officer's camera would create up to 2.5 gigabytes of data over a regular shift.

"We have to ensure that on that occasion when something bad can or does happen, that it's captured in its totality and that the technology doesn'tfail," he said.

TPS held the session Tuesday not onlyto solicit camera manufacturers, but also to find outif the technology has improvedenough to make the cameras effective tools for police.

Tech has 'rapidly evolved'

Barskyis optimisticthe service will be able to find a partner who can meet the needs of its officers and the public.

"The reality is, when we did our pilot project in 2015, there were about a handful of vendors," he explained. "We appreciate the technology has rapidly evolved as well as the number of vendors has increased."

Police will choosea companywith input from William Mocsan, a fairness commissionerwithKnowles Canada, a management consulting firm.

Barsky said he expects the process to take about 20 to 24 months from now until full implementation, at an estimated total cost of $51 million spread out over several years.

In its review of the pilot project published in June 2016, Toronto police concluded thatbody-worn cameras "do provide the unbiased, independent account of police/community interactions."

Polling suggests that 85 per cent of current officers support the use of the technology, while 95 per cent of civilians surveyed back service-wide use.

Former police watchdog calls for cameras

Advocates for cameras have called for the technology in order to give a clear view on police interactions with the public.

Ian Scott, a former director of Ontario'sSpecial Investigations Unit, spent years with the province's police watchdog agency investigating claims of misconduct by officers.

He believesvideo can bekeyevidence in trials, especially when there are different accounts of an event.

"There's always going to be a huge gap between memory and trying to reconstruct events from memory as opposed to video evidence, digital video evidence," Scott said.

A man with glasses listens to someone speak in an office.
Ian Scott, a former director of the Special Investigations Unit, said video can be key evidence in the prosecution of police misconduct and can provide transparency for the public. (CBC)

"No doubt in my mind that [video] will be of major assistance to anybody who has to make decision on police-public interactions."

Toronto would not be the lonemunicipality in southern Ontario to outfit its officers with body-worn cameras; Durham has also taken steps to begin a camera program for its police force this year.

Scott added thatcameras can provide transparency to communities that might nottrustpolice officers.

"It's going to help us understand what is going on in these interactions. Half the battle is understanding, because ...there can be a lot of controversy over what the police saw or what happened."

With files from Adrian Cheung