Tiburon – California
Tiburon is a small town kind of place, with a small town kind of atmosphere. It is the kind of place where you get the feeling that everyone knows everyone else.
When one wanders through its little streets, just north of San Francisco, one gets the sense that a few of the residents, on seeing someone who appears not to be from around those parts, reach for their handkerchief and hand sanitizer.
How can one, therefore, be surprised that a meeting of the Tiburon Town Council voted on Wednesday by 4 to 0 to install cameras to photograph every single car that enters or leaves this little Disneyland? So much for the right of privacy eh?
The San Francisco Chronicle reported that this may be the first community in the country to have defended itself with cameras in such a way. The idea is to photograph the license plates of every car that treads Tiburon’s hallowed roads and compare the information with the police’s list of the stolen and nefarious.
The Tiburon police chief, Michael Cronin, told the Chronicle: “I think it makes the community safer.”
The Tiburon police–inspired, perhaps, by Google–promise that the information will be kept for only 30 days. Yea like we really believe him.
The strange thing is that Tiburon, a northern suburb of San Francisco, isn’t exactly Oakland. It doesn’t enjoy high crime figures. Indeed, some might say that the most criminal elements in the place are to be seen on the racks of its clothes stores.
The town is fortunate, however, in that it is on a peninsula, from which there are only two roads. So the total cost of putting up six cameras is estimated to be no more than $200,000, which works out at something near $20 per resident. (Tiburon residents enjoy, by the way, a median income somewhere above $125,000.)
I know there will be some who believe you can never have enough security cameras in this heinous and half-witted world. But perhaps some will worry that the police might make rather instinctive judgments about the provenance of certain cars and their intentions.
Others will wonder whether this decision might affect businesses in Tiburon. Still others will ponder whether the police might be willing to offer a Web site showing the movements of all its officers.
I merely wonder how many people, knowing they might have to go to Tiburon for a meal of organic Kobe beef, rosemary ice cream, and plenty of Stags Leap cabernet, will choose to remove their front license plates. You know, just to be on the safe side.
I for one think that it is un-American for any town in this nation to photograph every single car that enters or leaves a town. This is something you would expect from a communist country of some fascist country; not America.
I for one think that unless Tiburon changes its policy, I will not be spending my money in this town. I choose to not support what they are planning on doing. This is a bad trend.
Beware going to or leaving Tiburon, California, big brother is photographing you.
San Francisco California Motorcycle Accident Attorney and Biker Lawyer
I agree with you Norm. I would not be going to this town and spending money. Maybe they want nobody to visit.
Read the accurate info on the town website. Pics are translated by software into lists of numbers. Numbers are matched to a hot list. Numbers are not connected to car owner unless owner is either a felon or car is a stolen car. Lists are deleted every 30 days. Access to ID info is restricted to that allowed by crime investigation. The cameras actually capture less info than is captured by observing any car on any road in the USA.
I will read the town’s website Allyka. However, even if what you say is true, it kind of smack’s like some science fiction movie type of thing that can and will be used abusively if allowed.
The coming and going of cars in a town in America should not be documented by big brother not matter how you justify it. Hell in a small town like this maybe the Sheriff will go to his friend and say “did you know your wife left town last night, etc.” I can just see it now.
Norm