El Paso is debating whether to keep its license plate surveillance program. This tech scans and records license plates across the city, and officials say it helps solve crimes. But some residents are concerned about privacy.
At a glance
Stable — consistent level of discussion. 1 mention in the last 30 days, 3 the 60 before.
It's unclear how much this program costs, but ditching it could save taxpayer money.
Cops and investigators benefit from the data to track down suspects and solve crimes faster.
Privacy-conscious residents might feel like they're being watched too much.
EL PASO, Texas (KTSM) -- El Paso Police have arrested thousands of people on driving while intoxicated charges over the last three years. Local officials are looking for ways to deter drivers from getting behind the wheel after having alcoholic...
Follow this issue in El Paso
Get an alert when it comes back up at City Hall — one plain-English email a week.
Free. Unsubscribe with one click any time. We never sell your email.
City council votes to keep AI-powered Flock license plate cameras as contract nears end KFOX