Pubdate: Wed, 15 Nov 2000 Source: Post and Courier (SC) Copyright: 2000 1999 Evening Post Publishing Co. Contact: 134 Columbus Street Charleston, SC 29403-4800 Website: http://www.charleston.net/ Author: Jason Hardin Bookmark: MAP's link to South Carolina articles is: http://www.mapinc.org/states/sc CITY O.K.s CAMERAS TO HELP STOP DRUGS Charleston City Council Tuesday approved in theory the use of surveillance cameras to combat the drug trade, unanimously supporting a resolution that would let neighborhood associations ask for the cameras. Councilman Wendell Gilliard, who proposed the resolution, said the idea for cameras came out of the drug conference he recently sponsored. Residents are fed up with drugs and problems related to their use and sale, and surveillance cameras could be an answer, he said. "We had better step up and speak up when it comes to your community," he told council. Charleston Police Chief Reuben Greenberg said cameras would be an excellent tool but that they are expensive, so council would have to provide money. "Where you have cameras, you lower the violence and crime in an area," he said. "(Criminals) don't beat people up, they don't break into cars, they don't even steal cars." Council spent little time on the matter, but some in the audience raised concerns. Real estate agent Anthony Bryant pointed to the controversial video of an apparent drug deal in front of City Councilman Kwadjo Campbell's East Side apartment. He said Campbell was treated unfairly in a rush to judgment and warned that appearances can be deceiving. "People have individual privacy rights," Bryant said. "Let's be really careful about what we do." Greenberg pointed out that the city already uses cameras - on the Cooper River bridges - and said the U.S. Supreme Court has held that there is no right to privacy in public spaces. "Americans feel they have an expectation of privacy in public. They don't," he said. The cameras were not the only drug-or police-related topic at Tuesday's meeting. Several West Side residents asked for more funds in the city's 2001 budget for police foot patrols. The meeting represented the formal start to the city's budget process and included time for public input on the budget. Only a few spoke, most asking for funding for their particular organization or activity. Council gets its first look at a proposed budget on Tuesday, Charleston Mayor Joseph P. Riley Jr. said. In other matters, council: * Gave first reading to ordinances annexing several properties covering 22.3 acres on James Island into the city. * Agreed to acquire several houses to be used for affordable housing. - --- MAP posted-by: Eric Ernst