SUNDOG
Nomad
Posts: 176
Registered: 8-9-2006
Location: Baja
Member Is Offline
|
|
Who paid for this?
Who paid for this?
Tijuana's sophisticated surveillance system cost at least $15 million. But no one seems to be able to answer this question:
By Anna Cearley
UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER
July 14, 2007
Tijuana has installed a sophisticated public-security system that is the envy of police departments around the world, but city officials don't seem to
know details about how it is funded or the background of the company that supplied it.
Staff at the command center for Tijuana's security system monitored a bank of screens showing images from surveillance cameras around the city. The
lack of public information about the program has been criticized by several Tijuana City Council members.
The system is a high-tech combination of cameras, emergency call buttons on red posts and handheld computers for police officers on the street.
Information is routed through a central command center that is equipped with 60 video screens and staffed 24 hours a day. A map of the city displays
the location of patrol cars tracked by Global Positioning System devices.
Estimated to cost at least $15.5 million to start, the program has been touted as a major initiative under the administration of former Mayor Jorge
Hank Rhon, a wealthy businessman who is running for governor of Baja California.
The system includes hundreds of emergency call buttons around the city that, when pressed, trigger an alarm in the command center.
Tijuana security system
by the numbers
The program includes a command center open 24 hours and staffed by civilians, as well as:
363 emergency button posts
3,000 emergency alarms
413 surveillance video cameras, including 68 that swivel toward the sound of gunfire
36 speed radar cameras
300 GPS devices placed in patrol cars so they can be monitored from the command center
150,000 photos entered in a facial recognition system intended to assist in identifying detainees
SOURCE: Command center staff
Despite much publicity, questions remain over how Tijuana, a city with limited funds and pressing community needs, managed to pay for what is
considered a costly endeavor even for U.S. cities.
It's also unclear who exactly is behind the company that provided the system, which became operational in late 2005, and continues to have a role in
its operations. Global Corp. Tijuana S.A. de C.V. is not registered with the state and has no listed phone number.
The company is connected with Global Sight, a security-system distributor based out of Chihuahua, Mexico. Records of who registered the business
weren't available.
City Council members who are part of the minority National Action Party, or PAN, say they support modernizing public security but oppose secrecy.
“We don't know what is the background of the company,” said Raúl Soria Mercado. “We have always been asking for transparency in this administration,
and it doesn't exist.”
The lack of information raises questions over who could be benefiting financially from the project.
It also illustrates that despite steps to improve government transparency, such as the formation of an office at City Hall to respond to public
records requests, Mexico is still bound by old habits that undercut the democratic process.
Despite having pushed for the program, Hank said this week that he didn't know who owned Global Corp. or what the company's contractual arrangement
was with the city.
The electronic brains behind much of the security system is in the city's command center in Zona Rio, a Tijuana business district. About 36 people
staff the 24-hour operation. They control the movement of more than 400 surveillance cameras mounted around the city. The images show up on the
center's 65-foot-by-13-foot montage of screens. Staffers report suspicious activities or emergencies to police.
The city is continuing to add cameras to the system, which has a capacity for 3,000, said Javier García Gastelum, director of the center. García said
the project cost $15.5 million; Hank said it cost $18.6 million.
The outcome of the project is expected to reflect on Hank, the Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI, candidate who is in a hotly contested race
for governor against PAN candidate José Guadalupe Osuna Millán.
Suspicious activity or emergencies that show up on video footage taken by more than 400 cameras in Tijuana and transmitted to the command center in
the Zona Rio business district are reported to police.
Hank, who oversees a gaming empire in Mexico called Grupo Caliente, comes from a wealthy family with deep political roots and connections.
His apparent lack of a need to raid city coffers – as other Tijuana politicians had done – was one reason why people supported him for mayor. Although
Hank has been dogged by allegations of illicit activities in the past, he has never been charged.
City officials say the public-security program has benefited the community. One command center operator said it has assisted in 12,800 detentions from
April 2006 to April 2007. García said a 70 percent decline in traffic accidents can be attributed to people driving more cautiously under the watchful
eye of the speed radar cameras.
García said he and the other command center staffers work for the city of Tijuana. The contracting company's duties, he said, involve installation,
fixing technological glitches and training.
Critics say the company's exact role and access to the system is unclear. Global Corp. has an office in the same building as the command center, even
though García said it worked off-site.
Speaking from Mexico City, Pedro Flores said he oversees a consortium of security companies including the one in Tijuana, but he couldn't say who owns
them.
“Our company is funded by different institutions, and I wouldn't be able to say who benefits from that,” Flores said.
He said the companies are registered in Mexico City and declined to comment on specifics of the contract, citing confidentiality agreements.
None of the city officials in Tijuana contacted this week mentioned any confidentiality clause.
“I'm just interested in the results,” said Kurt Honold, the interim mayor who is a close associate of Hank. “It's a very good project.”
The company's name first showed up in a city budget report from December 2004, when Hank became mayor. At that time, about 9 million pesos – or
$835,000 – was earmarked for the company.
Command center Director Javier García Gastelum said Tijuana's public security project cost $15.5 million, while former Mayor Jorge Hank Rhon put the
cost at $18.6 million.
Hank said this week that the city hired the company during his mayoral campaign “to do the design and everything.” After he was elected, “We had a bid
and they won,” he said.
PAN council members said there was no public bid for the bulk of the project, in part because the PRI majority rewrote city codes in 2005 to bypass
the bidding process for public security systems.
Hank said the Electronic Government Program was paid for by shifting funds in the city's budget, though some of the cameras were donated by local
businesses such as his own.
Tijuana had an annual budget of about $282 million in 2006, according to the city's Web site.
PAN officials said no one ever explained to them how the equivalent of 6 percent of the city's annual budget was found for the program.
Budget documents show that about $7 million has gone to Global Sight since 2004, but PAN council members said additional money may be listed in
different budget categories.
Frustrated with the lack of information, they voted against motions that paved the way for the program's implementation, such as one that changed
traffic codes to include the use of technology.
The motions nonetheless passed, because the PRI has a majority on the council.
In December 2006, the PRI majority voted to extend the contract – this time naming Global Corp. – to 10 years. A copy of the motion says this was
needed to guarantee “the legal certainty in regard to investments, capital recuperation terms, and to avoid the actualization of damages.”
No further information was provided. Hank said the company was receiving a portion of the collected speeding fines, but he didn't know how much.
“The law gives the mayor certain abilities to make these decisions, but that doesn't mean he shouldn't inform us,” said Raúl Castañeda Pomposo, a PAN
councilman who is a member of the City Council's Public Security Commission.
The San Diego Union-Tribune filed a public information request regarding part of the program: handheld computers that police use to record traffic
infractions and collect payments through credit cards.
In a written response, Tijuana officials said the computers were acquired at “no cost.” When asked if they were donations, the city didn't answer.
Instead, officials wrote back that the computers are part of the Electronic Government Program.
Allegations of government secrecy in public matters aren't limited to the PRI in Tijuana. In 2002, a Baja California newspaper, La Crónica, reported
that the Mexicali city government bought cars from a dealership owned by Gov. Eugenio Elorduy Walther without conducting a thorough bidding process,
as well as other alleged misdeeds by PAN governments.
César René Blanco Villalón, co-editor of Zeta, a Tijuana weekly that regularly does investigative reporting, said such stories don't typically lead
to changes, in part because a disillusioned public doesn't push for them. Zeta has written two stories about the surveillance company's secrecy.
“It's a scandal for a week, and the people get angry, but then they forget about it as the next scandal takes over,” he said.
His colleague Adela Navarro said lack of government transparency is a frustrating reality in Mexico, “and here in particular.”
Luis Javier Algorri Franco, the city's top public security official, said that perhaps people aren't looking for information with the right city
department.
He and other city officials directed questions about the program's funding to one of the administration's top officials, Victor Raul Padilla Fitch,
who didn't respond to phone calls or visits.
Meanwhile, the command center has been receiving visitors from Russia, Canada, England, China and the United States, where such programs are
expanding.
In San Diego, police have 14 surveillance cameras that were obtained through government grants and private donations. But the Police Department
doesn't have the resources to operate 24 hours, as in Tijuana.
“It's very impressive,” said San Diego police Sgt. Juan Gonzalez, who visited the Tijuana center this week. “It just shows that the technology is
available and it's just about finding the resources to implement some of that here.”
Additional government grants could be used to extend San Diego's program, Gonzalez said. But he added that it's unlikely the city of San Diego – with
a budget of about $1.1 billion – would have the means to pay for it on its own.
|
|
David K
Honored Nomad
Posts: 64855
Registered: 8-30-2002
Location: San Diego County
Member Is Offline
Mood: Have Baja Fever
|
|
You should have joined us last November, at Viva Baja Cactus where we got a tour of the space age facility!
|
|
toneart
Ultra Nomad
Posts: 4901
Registered: 7-23-2006
Member Is Offline
Mood: Skeptical
|
|
All of that surveillance equipment installed before their eyes and nobody knows who funded it? It seems the local government is taking lessons from
Bush/Cheney on how to claim "Executive Privilege".
What are the statistics on crime deterrence?
It would take a lot of credit card paid traffic tickets to pay the 15 to 18 million dollar cost. Are we paying our fair share yet?
Manned by civilians?
How effective has it been in stopping drug cartel operations?
Inquiring minds want to know:
|
|
bajaguy
Elite Nomad
Posts: 9247
Registered: 9-16-2003
Location: Carson City, NV/Ensenada - Baja Country Club
Member Is Offline
Mood: must be 5 O'clock somewhere in Baja
|
|
Probably
The Chinese.....
|
|
oldhippie
Banned
Posts: 742
Registered: 6-25-2006
Member Is Offline
Mood: muted
|
|
I would bet the feds paid for it, US, Mexico or perhaps both. Cartel violence seems to have tapered off in TJ, but then there's always tomorrow. I
wonder how effective the military checkpoints have been? I've seen cars pulled over and being searched maybe 10 to 20% of the times I go through them.
|
|
bajamigo
Super Nomad
Posts: 1218
Registered: 6-17-2006
Location: Punta Banda, BC
Member Is Offline
Mood: hubimos llegado
|
|
Actually, I paid for it. Don't try to thank me.
----- a US taxpayer
|
|
Al G
Ultra Nomad
Posts: 2647
Registered: 12-19-2004
Location: Todos Santos/Full time for now...
Member Is Offline
Mood: Wondering what is next???
|
|
What about the cartels...if I had lost some or most of my protection I pay for why not give a gift to appease the citizenry and be able to track all
the cops with GPS. 15 mil....not that much to keep the drugs flowing.
EDIT: Hope that is not the case.
[Edited on 7-15-2007 by Al G]
Albert G
Remember, if you haven\'t got a smile on your face and laughter in your heart, then you are just a sour old fart!....
The most precious thing we have is life, yet it has absolutely no trade-in value.
|
|
bajaguy
Elite Nomad
Posts: 9247
Registered: 9-16-2003
Location: Carson City, NV/Ensenada - Baja Country Club
Member Is Offline
Mood: must be 5 O'clock somewhere in Baja
|
|
Thanks
Quote: | Originally posted by bajamigo
Actually, I paid for it. Don't try to thank me.
----- a US taxpayer [/quote
While you are at it, can you also pay for my TV dish???? |
|
|
DENNIS
Platinum Nomad
Posts: 29510
Registered: 9-2-2006
Location: Punta Banda
Member Is Offline
|
|
Who cares?
What would you do if you really knew?
|
|
|