The Seattle Public Safety Committee advanced two significant surveillance-related bills addressing federal law enforcement concerns and state law compliance. In a meeting dominated by Chair Robert Kettle's extensive opening remarks defending the city's surveillance programs, the committee unanimously passed legislation to pause surveillance data collection when federal authorities seek information about immigration, reproductive healthcare, or gender-affirming care. The committee also approved changes to align Seattle's immigration inquiry policies with state law. Kettle delivered a 15-minute opening statement responding to Mayor Wilson's recent announcement of a surveillance audit and ALPR system pause. Drawing on his intelligence and security background, Kettle defended the surveillance programs as necessary for public safety, particularly with the FIFA World Cup approaching, and criticized concepts like "credible threat warnings" as impractical. He emphasized that the city's surveillance systems have not been abused and include built-in protections. The session featured strong public support for surveillance cameras from business owners and community leaders, who cited crime reduction benefits and public safety needs. Both bills passed 5-0, with the surveillance pause measure extending existing CCTV protections to the ALPR system and adding reproductive healthcare and gender-affirming care to the protected categories.
Public Safety Committee
Executive Summary
Key Decisions & Actions
& Actions **CB 121180 - Immigration Status Inquiries (5-0 PASS)** - **AB Number:** CB 121180 - **Action:** Technical update to align Seattle Municipal Code with 2019 state law - **Staff Recommendation:** Support alignment with Keep Washington Working Act - **Practical Impact:** No operational change to SPD policy, which already prohibits immigration status inquiries - **Key Details:** Removes federal immigration criteria and felony requirements, focusing on state/local law connections **CB 121179 - Surveillance Data Pause (5-0 PASS)** - **AB Number:** CB 121179 - **Action:** Extends 60-day pause provisions to ALPR system and adds new trigger categories - **Staff Recommendation:** Support as consistent with existing CCTV protections - **Practical Impact:** Mandatory 60-day pause when surveillance data requested for immigration, reproductive healthcare, or gender-affirming care enforcement - **Key Details:** Allows mayoral executive orders to temporarily resume data collection for evidence gathering
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- **March 31:** Both bills advance to full City Council meeting for final passage - **FIFA World Cup Preparation:** Stadium District cameras must be operational before event - **State Law Compliance:** SPD working with Axon on geo-fencing software implementation for ALPR systems - **Parking Enforcement Impact:** Genetech solution expected later in 2026, requiring manual enforcement interim - **Mayor's Audit Process:** Privacy and data governance audit to be completed before FIFA World Cup - **Federal Enforcement Monitoring:** 60-day pause triggers activated if federal warrants target protected categories
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