State & Local News
Mountain View Ends License Plate Reader Contract
March 18, 2026
The City of Mountain View has terminated its contract with Flock Safety for automated license plate reader (ALPR) cameras due to privacy concerns, including unauthorized access by out-of-state agencies. This decision reflects growing public opposition and scrutiny over surveillance technologies in Santa Clara County, where officials are reconsidering policies and contracts related to ALPR systems. Procurement professionals should note the increasing emphasis on privacy protections and community trust in surveillance technology acquisitions.
- The termination signals heightened risk and reputational concerns for vendors providing ALPR and surveillance solutions in municipal contracts.
- Agencies in Santa Clara County and similar jurisdictions may revise procurement requirements to include stricter data access controls and privacy safeguards.
- Contractors should anticipate potential contract cancellations or renegotiations driven by public and political pressure on surveillance technologies.
- Procurement teams should evaluate privacy implications and community impact when planning future ALPR or related technology procurements.
Today, we have an opportunity to limit a bad actor, a bad vendor, a vendor that has provided constructive notice across the country that they don't have a history of being trusted.
— County Supervisor Betty Duong
The primary reason I find value in it is to prevent or apprehend individuals who have committed violent crime, serious crimes.
— Sheriff Bob Jonsen
Flock cameras are the equivalent of putting a GPS tracker on every single car in the county regardless of whether you've been suspected of a crime.
— Huy Tran, Executive Director of SIREN
Agencies
City of Mountain View, Santa Clara County Board of Supervisors, Santa Clara County Sheriff's Department, City of Los Altos Hills
Vendors
Flock Safety