D.C. officials are giving police access to more than 5,000 closed-circuit TV cameras citywide that monitor traffic, schools and public housing-a move that will give the District one of the largest surveillance networks in the country."The primary benefit of what we're doing is for public health and safety," said Darrell Darnell,(picture left) director of the city's Homeland Security and Emergency Management Agency, who announced the initiative along with Mayor Adrian M. Fenty yesterday.But the announcement left some civil liberties advocates and a key D.C. Council member concerned."We've been sort of sounding the alarm on this stuff for a long time, saying these little pieces-they grow," said Art Spitzer, legal director for the American Civil Liberties Union of the National Capital Area."You put a camera here, it's not so bad, you put a camera there, it's not so bad. But then it turns out all the sudden, we find out there are 5,200 cameras. That's a big number."Council member Phil Mendelson, chairman of the Committee on Public Safety and the Judiciary, said that the proposed move was "breathtaking" and that the initiative "has not been thought through.""There is a huge civil liberty implication because they're talking about a fully interoperable system," said Mr. Mendelson, at-large Democrat."If it is as big as they are suggesting, this is a major change."The Video Interoperability for Public Safety (VIPS) program will consolidate the more than 5,200 cameras operated by D.C. agencies-including D.C. Public Schools and the D.C. Housing Authority-into one network managed by the city's Homeland Security and Emergency Management Agency.The program will allow agencies to share camera video feeds and provide the city with a network that is actively monitored and that Mr. Darnell said will operate "24 hours a day, 365 days a year."
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