Meetings ▸ Minutes
Legislative Matters Committee — Minutes, Sep 19, 2023
City of Somerville, Massachusetts
City Council Legislative Matters Committee
Meeting Minutes
6:00 PM
Tuesday, September 19, 2023
This meeting was held via Zoom and was called to order by Chair Davis at 6:01 pm and adjourned at
7:02 pm with a roll call vote of 4 in favor (Councilor Scott, Councilor Burnley, Councilor Kelly, and
Chair Davis), none opposed, and 1 absent (Councilor McLaughlin).
Others present: Neha Singh – Mayor’s Office, Suzanne Rinfret – Parking, Sean Sheehan – SPD,
Timothy Mitsakis – SPD, Mark Pulli – SPD, Stephanie Widzowski – Clerk of Committees.
Roll Call
Chairperson Lance L. Davis, Vice Chair Charlotte Kelly,
Willie Burnley Jr. and Jefferson Thomas (J.T.) Scott
Present:
Matthew McLaughlin
Absent:
Approval of the Minutes of the Legislative Matters Committee Meeting of
May 30, 2023.
Committee
Minutes
(ID # 23-0960)
ACCEPTED
RESULT:
Chairperson Davis, Vice Chair Kelly, City Councilor At
Large Burnley Jr. and Ward Two City Councilor Scott
AYE:
Ward One City Councilor McLaughlin
ABSENT:
Approval of the Minutes of the Legislative Matters Committee meeting of
July 12, 2023.
Committee
Minutes
(ID # 23-1177)
ACCEPTED
RESULT:
Chairperson Davis, Vice Chair Kelly, City Councilor At
Large Burnley Jr. and Ward Two City Councilor Scott
AYE:
Ward One City Councilor McLaughlin
ABSENT:
Requesting approval of the Surveillance Technology Impact Report for
Camera Ticket Enforcement.
Mayor's Request
(ID # 23-0234)
Chair Davis said that he recently received an updated report, and that he
would prefer to have the newer version submitted as a new item. He will
keep this item in committee until the new item is submitted.
KEPT IN COMMITTEE
RESULT:
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Legislative Matters Committee
Meeting Minutes
September 19, 2023
By Councilor Strezo
That the City Solicitor draft an Ordinance to protect homeowners from
developer and realtor mail, phone and email harassment.
Order
(ID # 23-0461)
Deputy Solicitor Shapiro said that he believes there is a solid legal argument
in support of such an ordinance. He said that there could be challenges on a
“compelled speech” argument, however. Chair Davis asked Liaison Singh to
discuss with Legislative Policy Analyst Salisbury any thoughts the
Administration may have about enforcement, and asked Solicitor Shapiro to
investigate whether private right of action could be included. Councilor
Burnley added that he has context for legislation in Chicago that he will
discuss with Analyst Salisbury.
KEPT IN COMMITTEE
RESULT:
By Councilor Burnley Jr. and Councilor Wilson
That the City Solicitor and the Director of Parking provide this Council with
an opinion on whether the adoption of Chapter 90, Section 20A of the
Massachusetts General Laws would allow the City to mail tickets for traffic
violations, including those identified through 311 reports.
Order
(ID # 22-1449)
Taken together with item 23-0219. Deputy Solicitor Shapiro said that there
is a legal basis for issuing a ticket based on a resident’s affidavit or photo of
the violation rather than firsthand observation by the Parking department,
but there is an issue of evidence. Chair Davis asked about the difference in
the eyes of a court between photos taken by automated third-party camera
equipment and photos submitted by a resident. Solicitor Shapiro said the
issue would be in cross examination and that phone photos can be tampered
with.
KEPT IN COMMITTEE
RESULT:
Bicycle Advisory Committee submitting comments re: ticketing by 311.
Public
Communication
(ID # 23-0219)
RECOMMENDED TO BE MARKED WORK
COMPLETED
RESULT:
Requesting approval of the Surveillance Technology Impact Report for
GrayKey Digital Forensics Analysis Tool.
Mayor's Request
(ID # 23-1354)
Liaison Singh said that the change from the previous impact report for this
technology that was accepted is that it was being used through the Office of
the Attorney General, but SPD is bringing it in-house. Lt. Sheehan said that
having the tech in-house speeds up investigations for more serious offenses.
He noted that UASI is paying for the yearly fee.
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Legislative Matters Committee
Meeting Minutes
September 19, 2023
Councilor Scott had a series of questions. They noted that two responses in
the report contradict each other regarding how many people will have
access; Lt. Sheehan said that two people will have access, one being a
supervisor. Councilor Scott asked which version of GrayKey will be used;
Det. Pulli said that it depends on the license, and Lt. Mitsakis said this
version of GrayKey is the one that costs $38,000. Councilor Scott asked
which UASI grant covers the yearly fee and whether the City Council has
access to the abstract. Lt. Mitsakis said that the Intelligence Subcommittee
was involved, adding that Boston OEM was purchasing the equipment itself
for SPD, and he was not sure if the abstract was currently available.
Councilor Scott also asked how long it would take to make an appointment
and retrieve the tech from the Attorney General - about 10-14 days.
Councilor Scott commented that this process seems to bypass the Council’s
ability to authorize funds and grant acceptances. She and Chair Davis both
requested that detail about storage, security (both physical and digital) and
access protocols for the tech be added to the report.
Councilor Kelly asked for a comparison of GrayKey software use in this
fiscal year compared to in the 2020 impact report, which listed 7 criminal
investigations and 12 devices. Det. Pulli said that so far, GrayKey has been
used in 15 investigations and on 20 devices. He added that this technology
has started to become standard in investigations as personal devices evolve.
Chair Davis requested that other Committee members forward further
questions to Liaison Singh proactively so action can be taken on the item
soon.
KEPT IN COMMITTEE
RESULT:
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