West Side business owners urging City Council to install $5M worth of security cameras

Chicago City Council
Photo credit Getty Images

A small group of business and community leaders urged city officials Monday to use $5 million in tax increment financing money to buy 200 surveillance cameras for the swanky Fulton Market District and the historically violent Garfield Park area.

Roger Romanelli, executive director of the Fulton Market Association, said the additional police observation devices, or POD cameras, can be used to “help our understaffed police officers fight and defeat the criminals in our city.”

“Our streets are running with blood. We have to put a tourniquet on the crime spree that’s happening in our city,” said Romanelli, who used the online news conference to highlight two “insane” shootings recently caught by private cameras.

The city’s first POD cameras were installed nearly two decades ago, but Romanelli and the other speakers were unable to point to any data showing they have brought crime down. They are part of a broader network utilizing tens of thousands of cameras.

The ACLU of Illinois has repeatedly raised alarms about the POD cameras, warning last February that the city’s camera system “continues to operate without any regulation or privacy or regular public reporting.”

ACLU spokesman Ed Yohnka said promises that the cameras will reduce crime simply haven’t been kept.

“It’s been this long-term kind of shadow game of saying just one more set of cameras will be effective, this is what we need,” Yohnka said. “It never works, and the answer is always more of the cameras.”

As violent crime surged last year, police officials pressured alderpersons to use money allocated to them on surveillance cameras and automated license plate readers.  The Daily Line reported in January that alderpersons spent more than $4.3 million of those so-called menu funds on the cameras in 2021 — quadrupling the total from the previous year.

In October of 2021, former Ald. Michelle Smith (43rd) said she was using her menu money for cameras but also urged residents of her affluent ward on the Near North Side to personally pitch in for more, estimating each camera cost $25,000.

Shootings and homicides have fallen significantly this year, but crime overall has risen.

Romanelli said Chicago cops “need every possible tool, every advantage to deter the criminals and, if necessary, to arrest and prosecute the criminals.”

Using the same cost estimate as Smith, Romanelli urged Mayor Lori Lightfoot and alderpersons Walter Burnett (27th) and Jason Ervin (28th) to pull money from a pair of TIF districts to purchase 200 cameras, which would be split between Fulton Market and Garfield Park.

Lightfoot, Ervin, Burnett and Police Supt. David Brown didn’t respond to requests for comment.

“Chicago must become safer,” Romanelli insisted in pushing the plan.

(Source: Sun-Times Media Wire & Chicago Sun-Times 2022. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.)

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