Enhanced camera surveillance, stiffer panhandling fines floated in safety report
WINNIPEG — A recent spike in crime in downtown Winnipeg could be reversed with high-tech public surveillance cameras, a crackdown on panhandlers and other measures, the Manitoba Police Commission said in a report released Tuesday.
The 46-page report from the civilian advisory group says authorities should consider adding to the nine closed-circuit cameras already installed in public areas downtown, and adopting video analytic software.
That software could detect and alert police to threatening motions and could extend to facial recognition, commission chair David Asper said.
“There’s technology which allows it to recognize certain behaviours, so assaultive behaviour for example will draw the alert to video monitors,” Asper said.