Jan 2, 2008, News Report
Mayor John F. Street and the Philadelphia Police Department unveiled the monitoring station for the city's new video surveillance camera system at a press conference at Police Headquarters in late December.
"Deploying video cameras as part of our crime fighting strategy is a great example of using technology to improve public safety and to enhance the quality of services we deliver to our citizens," Street said. "These cameras can and will make a difference in our neighborhoods."
As part of Operation Safer Streets, the Street Administration's initiative to reduce and prevent violence, the city contracted with Unisys Corporation to install 250 video surveillance cameras across the city. Currently 26 cameras are operational. All of the cameras will be installed and operating over the course of the next ten months. Monitoring of the cameras will be supervised by the Philadelphia Police Department.
The cost of installing the 250 cameras and of outfitting the video monitoring station at police headquarters is approximately $10 million.
Philadelphia installed 18 video surveillance cameras as part of an initial test program a year ago. According to police statistics, reported crimes at eight video locations with highly visible, unmonitored cameras decreased by 8.4 percent, and there was specifically a 37 percent decrease in violent crimes, most notably assaults and robberies.
In addition to deploying video cameras, the Street Administration is undertaking a host of other initiatives to reduce and prevent violence through Operation Safer Streets, including:
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Here is Big Brother. Being sold as something to help you. All this is crap. Just enforce the laws on the books. Just another way to oppress minorities and to put people under governments bootheels. We are no longer going to be the land of the free, but the home of the slaves.