[Ord. No. 1291, § I, 11-26-2024]
DISPARATE IMPACTMeans an adverse effect that is disproportionately experienced by individual(s) having any traits, characteristics, or status as to which discrimination is prohibited under the Constitution or any law of the United States, the constitution or any law of the Commonwealth of Massachussetts, or the Pittsfield Home Rule Charter or any law of the City of Pittsfield than by similarly situated individual( s) not having such traits, characteristics, or status.
EXIGENT CIRCUMSTANCESMeans the Police Chiefs or the Police Chiefs designee' s good faith belief that an emergency involving danger of death or physical injury requires use of the Surveillance Technology or the Surveillance Data it provides. The use of Surveillance Technology in Exigent Circumstances shall not infringe upon an individual' s right to peacefully protest and exercise other lawful and protected Constitutional Rights.
MARGINALIZED COMMUNITIESMeans communities that are defined by a common race, ethnicity, religion, national origin, disability, income level, sexual orientation, or political perspective.
PERSONAL COMMUNICATION DEVICEMeans a cellular telephone that has not been modified beyond stock manufacturer capabilities, a personal digital assistant, a wireless-capable tablet, or similar wireless two-way communications and/ or portable internet-accessing device, whether procured or subsidized by a City entity or personally owned, that is used in the regular course of conducting City business.
SURVEILLANCE DATEMeans any electronic data collected, captured, recorded, retained, processed, intercepted, or analyzed by surveillance technology acquired by the City or operated at the direction of the City.
SURVEILLANCE TECHNOLOGYMeans any software, electronic device, system utilizing an electronic device, or similar used, designed, or primarily intended to collect, retain, process, or share audio, electronic, visual, location, thermal, biometric, olfactory or similar information specifically associated with, or capable of being associated with, any individual or group.
A. "Surveillance technology" includes, but is not limited to:
(1) International Mobile Subscriber Identity ("IMSI") catchers and other cell site simulators;
(2) Automatic license plate readers;
(4) Closed-circuit television cameras except as otherwise provided herein;
(5) Biometric surveillance technology, including facial-, voice-, iris-, and gait-recognition software and databases;
(6) Mobile DNA capture technology;
(7) Gunshot detection and location hardware and services;
(9) Video and audio monitoring and/or recording technology, such as surveillance cameras, vehicle cameras, and wearable body cameras;
(10) Tools, including software and hardware, used to gain unauthorized access to a computer, computer service, or computer network;
(11) Social media monitoring software;
(12) Radio-frequency identification (RFID) scanner; and
(13) Software designed to integrate or analyze data from surveillance technology, including surveillance target tracking and predictive policing software.
B. For the purposes of this Ordinance, "surveillance technology" does not include the following devices, hardware, or software:
(1) Office hardware, such as televisions, computers, credit card machines, copy machines, telephones, and printers that are in widespread use by the City and are used for routine City business and transactions;
(2) City databases and enterprise systems that contain information kept in the ordinary course of City business, including, but not limited to, human resources, permits, licenses, and business records;
(3) City databases and enterprise systems that do not contain any data or other information collected, captured, recorded, retained, processed, intercepted, or analyzed by surveillance technology, including payroll, accounting, or other fiscal databases;
(4) Information technology security systems, including firewalls and other cybersecurity systems;
(5) Physical acess control systems, employee identification management systems, inventory control systems, and other physical control systems;
(6) Infrastructure and mechanical control systems, including those that control or manage streetlights, traffic lights, electrical, natural gas, or water or sewer functions;
(7) LiDAR technology and systems used for geographic information systems imagery purposes;
(8) Global positioning system technology used to collect field data or track City-owned vehicles that are stored on City property when not in use;
(9) Computers, software, hardware, or other devices used in monitoring the work and work-related activities involving City employes, contractors and volunteers or used in conducting internal investigations involving City employes, contractors and volunteers;
(10) Cameras installed on the exterior or the interior of City property solely for security purposes, such as to monitor entryways and outdoor areas of City-owned or -controlled buildings and property for the purpose maintaining the safety of City employees and visitors to City buildings, protecting City property, or to protect the physical integrity of City infrastructure;
(11) Cameras, computers, software, hardware, or devices used for or to facilitate broadcast or recording if public meetings;
(12) Police Department interview room, holding cell, and Police Department internal security audio/video recording systems;
(13) Police Department computer-aided dispatch (CAD), records/case management, Live Scan, boking, Department of Motor Vehicles, 9-1-1, and related dispatch and operation or emergency services systems;
(14) Police Department early warning systems;
(15) Parking ticket devices ("PTDs") and related databases;
(16) Manually operated, handheld cameras, audio recorders, and video recorders whose functionality is limited to manually capturing and manually downloading video and/or audio recordings;
(17) Surveillance devices that cannot record or transmit audio or video or be remotely accessed, such as image-stabilizing binoculars or night-vision goggles;
(18) Manually operated technological devices that are used primarily for internal City such as radios, personal devices, and email systems; and
(19) Parking access and revenue control systems, including proximity card readers and transponder readers at City-owned or controlled parking garages.
SURVEILLANCE USE POLICYMeans a publicly released written policy for governing the City's use of surveillance technology, approved by the City Attorney as to form, and submitted by the Mayor to and approved by the City Council. The Surveillance Use Policy shall, at a minimum, include the following:
A. Purpose: the specific purpose(s) that the surveillance technology item is intended to advance;
B. Authorized use: the uses that are authorized, the rules and processes required prior to such use, the location(s) it may be deployed, and uses of the surveillance technology that will be expressly prohibited;
C. Data collection: what types of surveillance data will be collected, captured, recorded, intercepted, or retained by the surveillance technology;
D. Data access: the category of individuals who can aces or use the collected information, and the rules and processes required prior to aces or use of the information;
E. Data protection: the general safeguards that protect information from unauthorized aces, including encryption and access control mechanisms;
F. Data retention: the limited time period, if any, that information collected by the surveillance technology will be routinely retained, the reason such retention period is appropriate to further the purpose( s) enumerated in the Surveillance Use Policy, the process by which the information is regularly deleted after that period lapses, and the specific conditions that must be met to retain information beyond that period;
G. Public access: how collected information can be accessed or used by members of the public, consistent with the provisions of the Public Records Law and its implementing regulations;
H. Third-party data-sharing: if and how other Pittsfield or non-Pittsfield entities, agencies, departments, bureaus, divisions, or units can aces or use the data collected by the surveillance technology, including any required justification or legal standard necessary to share that data, and how City of Pittsfield will ensure that any entity sharing or receiving such data complies with the Surveillance Use Policy;
I. Maintenance: whether use or maintenance of the surveillance technology will require data gathered by the surveillance technology to be handled or stored by a third-party vendor on an ongoing basis and, if so, the parameters of the third-party vendor's use, handling, or storage;
J. Training: the training required for any individual authorized to use the surveillance technology or to aces information collected by the surveillance technology;
K. Complaints: what procedures will be put in place by which members of the public can register complaints or concerns, or submit questions about the deployment or use of a specific surveillance technology, and how the municipal entity will ensure each question and complaint is responded to in a timely manner; and
L. Auditing and oversight: the mechanisms to ensure that the Surveillance Use Policy is followed, including internal personnel assigned to ensure compliance with the policy, internal recordkeeping of the use of the technology or access to informationcollectedd by the technology, technical measures to monitor for misuse, any independent person or entity with oversight authority, and the legally enforceable sanctions for violations of the policy.
CITY OF PITTSFIELDMeans any department, agency, bureau, and/ or subordinate division of the City of Pittsfield, except those under the jurisdiction of the School Committee, Regional School Committee, or Library Trustees.