Apr 26 2013

The Piedmont Police and Fire Pension Fund Board will meet on Wednesday, May 1, 2013, at 4:00 p.m. in the City Council Chambers, 120 Vista Avenue.

Piedmont continues to maintain its own pension fund for fire and public safety employees who retired prior to the City’s transfer of active fire and public safety employees into the California Public Retirement System (CalPERS). According to a report issued by the City, in the 3rd Quarter of fiscal year 201212/13, pension benefits paid to 16 retired beneficiaries amounted to $69,202 for the current 16 beneficiaries.  As of March 31, 2013, the assets in the Piedmont Pension Fund totaled more than $10 million ($10,216,866).  > Click to read more…

Apr 14 2013

Burglaries, Robberies and Car Thefts

At the City Council meeting on Monday, April 15, 2013, 7:30 p.m., in City Council Chambers, 120 Vista Avenue, Police Chief Rikki Goede will give a quarterly report on crime in Piedmont. Click to see the report.  Crime climbed during the first 3 months of 2013 compared to 2012. > Click to read more…

Apr 8 2013

City Considers Purchase of Fixed LPRs at Piedmont/Oakland Borders and Additional Mobile LPRs in Police Cars –

At its Thursday, April 4, meeting, the Piedmont Public Safety Committee considered the proposed License Plate Reader (LPR) project.  The City Council had requested the Committee to discuss the proposal and make a recommendation to the Council. > Click to read more…

Apr 8 2013

Is there evidence that License Plate Readers lower crime rates? Police Chief says, “No.”

The Piedmont Public Safety Committee met on Thursday, April 4, in the Council chambers with an unusually large audience who were primarily interested in the proposal to purchase License Plate Readers (LPR) for Piedmont egress/ingress points.  First, the new Committee member, Dana Sack, was introduced and Committee member Lyman Shaffer reported  there have been 13 Neighborhood Watch meetings in 2013, with 9 more scheduled. > Click to read more…

Apr 8 2013

Once again, Piedmont is receiving attention as an exclusive, wealthy city concerned about others coming into the community.

The CBS San Francisco affiliate broadcast a report titled, “Piedmont hoping to curb burglaries with crime cameras at city limits.”  According to the Wednesday, April 3 newscaat, “Now Piedmont, which is entirely surrounded by Oakland wants to put cameras at all its 30 street-entry points, to trace robbery suspects.”  Piedmonters Lindsay Barstow and John Kelson as well as the Police Chief express support for License Plate Readers (LPRs) on CBS. > Click to read more…

Apr 8 2013

National Prescription Drug Take Back Day

Unused or outdated prescription drugs can be dropped off at the Piedmont Police Department on Saturday, April 27 between 10 am and 2 pm. Properly disposing of medications can be a challenge, as most drug stores will not accept them, and other methods of disposal pose potential health and safety hazards. The service offered by the Police Department is conveniently located in the center of Piedmont. > Click to read more…

Apr 1 2013

Public Safety Committee to discuss benefits and appropriateness of License Plate Readers in Piedmont – 

On Thursday, April 4, at 5:30 p.m., the Committee will meet in the Council Chambers, 120 Vista Avenue, to consider:

  •  Update on Neighborhood Watch Meetings
  •  Discussion of License Plate Readers for Piedmont
  •  Discussion of Home and/or Private Surveillance Camera Systems
  •  Discussion of Harvest Festival Event Planning
  •  Discussion of Piedmont Safety Committee Charge

Staff reports are  not available as of this date, nor is information on whether the meeting will be broadcast via KCOM or streamed live on the internet.  The public can participate in the meeting at City Hall.

After a presentation by Piedmont Police Chief  Riki Goede at a recent City Council meeting on the efficacy of placing License Plate Readers (LPR) at various streets leading into Piedmont, the City Council referred the matter to the Public Safety Committee for consideration and requested more information from staff on funding sources, using a sole source provider, the 3M company, and examples of effectiveness from other cities or communities similar to Piedmont.

Piedmont residents have expressed differing opinions about the LPR program. Some questioned the cost effectiveness of the $1 million-plus program, while others urged immediate installation of LPRs due to a number of recent home invasion robberies under gunpoint.

Read more about LPRs

Network of License Plate Readers Proposed for Piedmont

Mar 30 2013

License Plate Readers project added to agenda at last minute –  

The Budget Advisory and Financial Planning Committee met on March 27 in the Police Department Emergency Operations Center.  The agenda as considered by the Committee was not circulated in a manner compliant with the Brown Act, California’s sunshine law.

The Committee considered the following items:

1. Review of FY 2012-13 mid year report

2. Discussion of financial impacts of possible license plate reader project.  This item was belatedly placed on the agenda at the request of Councilmember Jeff Weiler, who is not a member of the Committee. > Click to read more…

Mar 19 2013

City Council to consider cost to install readers at all Piedmont entrances or a dozen primary entrances. 

On February 4, 2013, Police Chief Rikki Goede informed the City Council that the Police Department had met with a vendor of license plate readers and was waiting for a final estimate of the cost to install License Plate Recognition systems at all Piedmont ingress/egress points.  The Police Department determined there are 24 entrance points between Piedmont and Oakland.

A partial cost estimate by the 3M company was referenced in the Police Chief’s March 18 Update. For the software, equipment, mounting assembly hardware, sales tax, shipping costs, for the 57 cameras, the City of Piedmont would pay 3M an estimated $978,716, not including installation. “Additionally, an optional, but recommended, three-year extended maintenance warranty of $174,700 would need to be considered, increasing the total to $1,153,416.”

At the February 19, 2013 City Council meeting Vice Mayor Margaret Fujioka asked Chief Goede to determine if the $68,068.33 Citizens Option for Public Safety (COPS) funds from the State can be used to purchase additional license plate readers.  At the June 21, 2010 City Council meeting, George Kersh objected to the use of the prior year COPS funds for purchase of a license plate reader.  (That license plate reader remains in mobile use in a Piedmont Police vehicle.)

Police departments nationwide are eagerly acquiring Automatic License Plate Recognition (ALPR) systems.  A report published by the Police Executive Research Forum (PERF) finds that ALPR systems are primarily used for finding stolen cars or vehicles that have multiple parking violations and can be booted or towed.  With federal funding, police department purchases skyrocketed and the cost of ALPR camera units is decreasing.

In 2009, Tiburon installed ALPRs at their border on the only two roads going in and out of town at a cost of $130,000*.  Cameras point in each direction of traffic, each one trained on two lanes.   The cameras constantly look for listed plates of stolen vehicles.  When a plate is recognized, an automated alert with date, time and location is sent to any linked network.  There are a number of false positives due to the California Department of Motor Vehicles lag time in updating recovered stolen vehicles.  The majority of Tiburon hits are lost or stolen plates, not stolen cars or other crimes.

The currently available camera units are capable of capturing thousands of license plates per minute from two traffic lanes.  They can be mounted on buildings, telephone poles, information signs, traffic signals or on a police car.

The 2012 PERF publication “How Are Innovative Technologies Transforming Policing” reported on a 30-week control experiment in 45 high auto theft locations in Mesa, Arizona (2012 population 439,041).  The license plate reader systems scanned 751,000 plates, resulting in the recovery of 14 stolen vehicles.  In a comparable period without the license plate reader systems, 7 stolen vehicles were recovered.  While twice as many vehicles were recovered, there was no decrease in the number of auto thefts after the license plate reader systems were acquired.  (This was noted as the only field evaluation of the effectiveness of the systems for decreasing crime rates and crime solving.)

PERF found that 71% of responding police agencies across the US have license plate reader systems. They are used to locate stolen cars and cars with multiple parking tickets in order to boot or tow them.  The readers can scan passing cars or parked cars (from a moving police vehicle) and automatically alert police on any license number that is in the data base.

*Half the cost was paid by Belvedere, the island town whose only access is through Tiburon.

http://www.ci.piedmont.ca.us/html/govern/staffreports/2013-03-18/platereaders.pdf

http://policeforum.org/library/critical-issues-in-policing-series/Technology_web2.pdf

Mar 13 2013

City and School Elected Officials Discuss Common Issues –

The City/School Liaison Committee, consisting of Piedmont Mayor John Chiang and Vice Mayor Margaret Fujioka, School Board President  Rick Raushenbush and Vice President Andrea Swenson, will meet on Friday, March 15, 2013, at 4:00 p.m. in the City Hall Conference Room, 120 Vista Avenue.

The Committee meets periodically to discuss areas of interest to the City and the School District and makes recommendations to the City Council and Piedmont Unified School Board.

They will discuss the following issues on Friday.

1. PUSD Construction Update (Modernization Program)
2. School Safety and Security Procedures, On Campus
3. Discussion of Field Use Rules
4. Schedule of Future Meetings – Agenda Topics

The meeting is open to the public.