What troubles me is MTA totally bypassing the Maryland General Assembly after repeated attempts to get audio and video surveillance legalized through the MGA and both the House and Senate shot down the proposal, on privacy grounds, and now the MTA has basically said "Screw it, we're equipping audio surveillance on our buses whether you like it or not." and have placed audio recording on 10 buses and wants to expand it to all 600 buses eventually and all new MTA buses that are being ordered comes with audio and video surveillance as "standard equipment".
Here's a Baltimore Sun article about this: http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/mar...obref=obinsite
In each of the last three legislative sessions, bills filed on behalf of MTA to authorize recording devices and establish ground rules for their use were rejected in committee.
An ACLU lawyer said he was "flabbergasted" that MTA officials would try to record people's conversations under the guise of a pilot program after a similar proposal was rejected in 2009 by the state's highest-ranking transportation official and by the General Assembly on three occasions.
"People don't want or need to have their private conversations recorded by MTA as a condition of riding a bus," said David Rocah, a staff attorney with the Maryland chapter of the ACLU. "A significant number of people have no viable alternative to riding a bus, and they should not be forced to give up their privacy rights."



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