Cabbies' Cameras Will Record Crime
Saturday, July 11, 2009
Taxi drivers are hoping on-board CCTV cameras will put the brakes on crime and anti-social behaviour.
Stoke-on-Trent City Council and Staffordshire Police now have the computer software to take footage from cabs to be used as evidence.
Drivers will have to buy the cameras themselves at a cost of around £150.
But the technology will mean images can be downloaded at Etruria's Northern Area Custody Facility.
Taxi bosses who already have CCTV systems say they are an effective weapon against problem passengers.
Arfan Mohammed, owner of A1 National Embassy private hire firm, has cameras fitted in all his 92 cabs.
The 30-year-old said: "Since we had the cameras drivers are getting zero hassle. As soon as someone gets in the cab they see the signs and know the camera's there.
"It also makes customers more comfortable and relaxed if they know there's CCTV, especially women on their own, or parents who call us to pick up their children.
"Now the police and the council have this software it makes it easier for drivers to purchase the cameras and protect themselves."
Previously a driver would have needed extra kit to download the images from cameras themselves.
But the authorities are now able to extract the evidence and the city council's licensing department can also install software to imprint images with the vehicle's registration details and the date and time.
That will mean they make better evidence if required by police.
Glyn Cross, the authority's principal licensing officer, said: "We can put details of the vehicle's registration onto the camera's memory card. This links the camera to a vehicle.
"The police are the only ones who can download the pictures so they can't be interfered with, which will protect their integrity if they are needed as evidence."
The £1,000 software is funded by The Safer City Partnership.
Figures are not kept relating specifically to attacks on cabbies in the region.
But Inspector Shaun Kerrigan, commander of the city centre neighbourhood policing unit, said: "This will offer reassurance for drivers and the public. It's open to Hackney carriage and private hire drivers.
"We don't have many incidents of attacks of taxi drivers, but this will be a deterrent."
Dave Currie, secretary of Stoke-on-Trent Private Hire Association, pictured, believes drivers need help to buy the cameras.
He said: "The crucial aspect of this CCTV is it has to be affordable."
Anyone interested in installing CCTV in their taxi should contact Stoke-on-Trent City Council's licensing department on 01782 232774.
Source; thisisstaffordshire.co.uk