If traffic enforcement cameras are made in China — or have parts made there — two Miami-area Republican lawmakers are proposing legislation that would stop them from monitoring traffic in this state.
Republicans Sen. Alexis Calatayud and Rep. Demi Busatta Cabrera are proposing identical legislation (SB 1464/HB 1363) that brings new scrutiny to what's watching activity out on the street.
"The bill ensures we have proper transparency and reporting requirements as usage of red light cameras increases across the state," Busatta Cabrera texted Florida Politics in response to questions about the bill. "We must ensure these programs are in place for the purpose of promoting public safety and not to profit off of hard working Floridians."
The legislation was filed days before a proposal that would install a speed detection camera system to enforce school zone rules pulls up in front of a Miami-Dade County Commission committee. According to a proposal due for a committee vote Monday, fines would pay for the contracted camera system for speed detection, the paperwork shows.
Red-light camera system citations peaked in 2016-17 with more than 170 million notices of red-light violations sent out, according to a Fiscal Year 2022 report from the Florida Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles.
Miami-Dade County's administration is recommending the approval of a $215 million, six-year contract for a camera system to improve safety around schools for a six-year term. Legislation (HB 657) passed last year allowed the speed detection systems with a smattering of Republicans voting "no."
Busatta Cabrera did not mention it in her reason for proposing the legislation, but the Chinese surveillance state has been getting more attention lately. One Chinese city is said to have one camera for every six residents — 1.58 million cameras covering 15.35 million people, the Guardian reported.
Even if you've never set foot in China, a Chinese company's cameras have likely captured you. Hikivision, which began as a Chinese state entity and maintains close ties with China's leaders, has captured 12% of the North American street surveillance market, The Atlantic reported.
The bill follows other laws that indicate growing unease with China's involvement in U.S. affairs. Last year, Gov. Ron DeSantis signed three bills to "counteract the malign influence of the Chinese Communist Party in the state of Florida," according to a news release from his office.
One currently under court appeal, prohibits governmental entities from contracting with "countries of concern," including China, from buying agricultural lands. Another law approved last year cracks down on state college and university personnel accepting gifts or participating in partnerships with the same. Still another prohibits the use of the Chinese-founded social media application TikTok on state-issued cell phones and devices.
Busatta Cabrera said she didn't know if the proposed Miami-Dade County contract for speed monitoring included cameras made in China,. The proposal up for approval Monday would piggyback on a contract that RedSpeed Georgia LLC has with the city of Alpharetta in Georgia. The back-up material for the item up for vote does not indicate the camera manufacturer.
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