³ÉÈËXÕ¾

³ÉÈËXÕ¾ NEWSRADIO

Seattle scraps ShotSpotter plans; advances surveillance, license plate readers

Jun 3, 2024, 1:14 PM

Photo: ShotSpotter equipment being used in Chicago. The software will soon be deployed in Tacoma....

ShotSpotter equipment being used in Chicago. The software will soon be deployed in Tacoma. (File photo: Charles Rex Arbogast, AP)

(File photo: Charles Rex Arbogast, AP)

Seattle Mayor Bruce Harrell has abandoned plans to install acoustic gunshot locators in Seattle. The decision, which ends over a decade of efforts to implement this technology, was made after receiving more precise cost estimates for the comprehensive

Last year the Seattle City Council authorized $1.8 million for a suite of new crime-finding technologies including ShotSpotter, a gunshot detection system using microphones, GPS and cell networks to alert police of gunfire. It faced criticism for its high false alarm rate and potential to increase over-policing in communities of color.

The $800,000 for Shotspotter proved to be too much for the Mayor. Instead, he proposed a pilot program of closed-circuit camera surveillance systems and an expansion of automatic license plate readers.

“Seattle needs more options in our public safety toolkit, and this pilot will add proven, evidence-based solutions and technologies to help communities,” Harrell said in a news release Friday.

Other news: Lawmakers, judges, incarcerated people seek resentencing reform amid victim concerns

The pilot will see the installation of CCTV cameras in three high-crime neighborhoods — Aurora Avenue North, the Third Avenue downtown corridor and the Chinatown-International District (CID) — and their integration with new software into the city’s “real-time crime center” (RTCC).

“Due to the density of offices, businesses, residents and the boundaries (geographic shape) of the CID, and the characteristic of the CID being a small, self-contained city in itself with multiple parks, gathering spaces, as well as concealed and no-so-visible spaces, the test data will have foreseeable benefits and invaluable to the CID community,” CID Public Safety Council Co-Chair Gary Lee said in the news release.

The city will also expand the use of Automated License Plate Readers (ALPR) from 11 to all police vehicles with dashcams, aiding investigations and crime prevention efforts. The technology expansion follows extensive public engagement, which included over 1,000 comments and input from various community organizations, according to a release from the mayor’s office.

The will oversee the pilot’s implementation and evaluation, ensuring the technologies meet their intended goals. An initial evaluation will occur after the first year, with a final review after two years.

Matt Markovich often covers the state legislature and public policy for ³ÉÈËXÕ¾ Newsradio. You can read more of Matt’s stories here. Follow him on , or email him here.

³ÉÈËXÕ¾ Newsradio

primary election King County...

Heather Bosch

Voting in today’s primary election 

As of Monday morning, only 15.5% of registered King County voters had turned in their ballots for the Washington primary.

3 hours ago

kratom capsules...

Jake Skorheim and Spike O'Neill Show

‘Anybody can buy it’: Jake and Spike warn of ‘legal morphine’ Kratom products

Jake and Spike are warning of kratom-related products.

1 day ago

burien city council...

John Curley Show

‘A big fat lie’: Burien council member slams DESC-run facility over lack of treatment

A Burien City Council member voiced her frustrations with a DESC-run shelter over a lack of treatment.

3 days ago

Andrew Tate...

Jake Skorheim and Spike O'Neill Show

‘Nothing quite like it’: Hydroplane champion captures rush of Seafair races

The roar of hydroplane engines returned to Lake Washington Friday as the Apollo Mechanical Cup kicked off Seafair weekend.

4 days ago

blue angels...

Jake Skorheim and Spike O'Neill Show

Is Blue Angels protest going to stop festivities? — ‘Heck no!’ Jake Skorheim says

Jake and Spike talk about the Blue Angels ahead of Seafair weekend.

4 days ago

Image: Seattle City Council President Sara Nelson...

John Curley Show

‘Throwing money at the right problem’: Seattle council president defends tax-funded treatment bill

Seattle City Council President Sara Nelson explained her addiction treatment bill on "The John Curley Show."

4 days ago

Seattle scraps ShotSpotter plans; advances surveillance, license plate readers