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Today the Judiciary Committee introduced a bill to regulate the use of automated license plate reader systems and safeguard data derived from such systems.
H.B. No. 5449, An Act Concerning Automated License Plate Reader Systems, would dictate how public agencies and law enforcement could operate automated license plate reader systems or use the data from such systems.
Data collected by these systems cannot be retained for more than seven days unless there's a warrant or a court order, or if the data is for the purpose of collecting highway usage fees.
The bill describes a number of restrictions for usage of data collected by automated license plate reader systems.
No public agency or law enforcement agency operating a system may use the data for:
The bill also says automated license plate reader data "shall not be disclosable under the Freedom of Information Act pursuant to chapter 14 of the general statutes" though it will disclose locations of any still or video image recording device used as part of an automated license plate reader system and other data derived from audits of the system, usage logs, etc., so long as all automated license plate reader data has been redacted.
There would also be limits on contracts or agreements with private vendors that might interact with automated license plate reader systems and data to restrict them from selling, sharing, transferring, disseminating or otherwise providing access to the data, except as authorized in the bill.
Agencies could be sued for failing to follow HB 5449.
The remainder of the bill describes data retention and deletion rules, access and sharing restrictions, training and policy requirements and such.
The Connecticut ACLU is going to love this.







Alex, I’ll take “What is not a protected class for $500”.
Good grief.
(No arguments for a surveillance state were implied in this comment)