CCTV Bid For Cardiff Taxis
July 11, 2009
They have been home to everything from first kisses to midnight fumbles and marital strife – but will the back seat of a taxi keep its romance when recorded on CCTV?
A Cardiff surveillance firm is applying for permission to install security cameras to record passengers in city taxis.
The plans being proposed by Visual Integrated Systems would see small cameras installed in the rear of a cab with the image beamed through to a screen the driver’s dashboard.
A record of the images captured would be stored on a hard drive and could be studied by police or council officers for up to 28 days afterwards.
Tony Carroll, the company’s director, said that the cameras would help provide security not just for drivers but also for passengers.
He said: “For the public, it gives them security. There would be stickers on the window saying that the cab was fitted with CCTV.
“It has been used in cabs in London and Bristol where it has been very successful.”
Mr Carroll’s is the second firm in the city to apply for his equipment to be approved by Cardiff council and has already been tested in Rhondda Cynon Taff.
Crime has been a problem in city taxis for several years and was one of the reasons why the restriction on the number of licensed cabbies was dropped.
There have been reports of taxi drivers being assaulted and complaints from passengers about bogus drivers.
Cab firms in the city are interested in testing out the cameras but concerned that some customers might be put off.
Naz Nourizadeh, of Delta Cabs, said: “Taxi drivers are continually subject to abuse. Having a CCTV in the car could be beneficial.
“There is the aspect to it we have been discussing about whether customers will feel comfortable but if they are responsible, I don’t think they will mind.
“You are filmed everywhere these days, even in the bus. Why not in a cab?”
Mr Carroll’s application was put before Cardiff council’s public protection committee but was not approved as no-one from the manufacturer was present at the hearing.
Council officers have indicated that the equipment and recording system should be secure and not record any passengers below their waste.
In council papers, chief officer Sean Hannaby said: “The passenger of a Hackney carriage is hiring the vehicle as a whole and is paying a fare for transport in safety, comfort and privacy.
“It is important that the passenger, as the hirer of the vehicle is not subjected to excessive or intrusive surveillance.”
Source; WalesOnline.co.uk