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DEC and EPA radiological survey hits the road on Monday
DEC and EPA radiological survey hits the road on Monday

Yahoo

time7 days ago

  • Science
  • Yahoo

DEC and EPA radiological survey hits the road on Monday

The New York State Department of Environmental Conservation in partnership with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency will be conducting a vehicle-based radiological survey of Erie and Niagara counties starting Monday. The ground-level survey will supplement data collected during the first phase of the radiological survey that took place in late 2023 and the summer of 2024, as well as historic surveys from the 1970s and1980s. Information collected will be used by state and federal experts to guide any necessary follow-up with on-the-ground surveys and sampling later this year. DEC, the New York State Department of Health (DOH), and EPA are coordinating this effort and will continue to keep the community informed as this evaluation progresses. In the first phase of the radiological survey, DEC and EPA did not identify any areas of immediate concern. Phase II of the survey will be conducted by an EPA truck equipped with a suite of sensors for measuring potential radiation sources. The truck will have four sensors to measure radiological energy emissions from four separate directions, as well as a mobile GPS unit. The survey is expected to take approximately four weeks, with the unmarked EPA pickup truck traveling 180 to 240 miles per day on selected roadways in Niagara and Erie counties. The vehicle will travel slowly — typically 20 miles per hour — on the shoulder of roads with hazard flashers. Detection equipment will include the same suite of sensors that measured potential radiation sources from the air as part of Phase I of the survey, which was conducted by a single-engine, low-flying plane called the Airborne Spectral Photometric Environmental Collection Technology (ASPECT). The various sensors on the pickup truck work together to generate data that will supplement data captured from Phase I to evaluate radiological activity at ground level and ascertain whether the source of the activity is naturally occurring or from a man-made source. Phase 3, which will involve on-the-ground surveys by DEC and EPA staff of selected areas using data captured in Phases 1 and 2, is scheduled to start later in 2025. Western New York was a hub for the manufacturing of atomic weapon components during World War II and other industries using or producing radiologic materials. This survey is being performed out of an abundance of caution to provide the most current and scientific information to complement a similar aerial radiological survey of the region that was previously conducted in 1984 that assessed the extent of potential use and distribution of biproducts and waste material containing radiological material.

Watching from above: Surveillance in Cape Town
Watching from above: Surveillance in Cape Town

Mail & Guardian

time28-05-2025

  • Politics
  • Mail & Guardian

Watching from above: Surveillance in Cape Town

Growing reliance on military-grade surveillance has drawn concern from civil society and privacy advocates. In 2024, the City of Cape Town unveiled its Eye in the Sky (Eye) Information, Surveillance and Reconnaissance initiative — an advanced aerial technology system designed to provide real-time monitoring of activities on the ground. Marketed as a milestone in the City's crime-fighting strategy, Eye forms part of a broader push to integrate surveillance technologies into public safety and urban governance. According to JP Smith, mayoral committee member for safety and security, the city has also invested in similar technologies to address environmental issues such as mountain fires and illegal marine poaching. Unlike traditional drones, Eye boasts superior aerial imaging and extended operational endurance. It can fly at higher altitudes, operate longer, and function in adverse weather conditions. Equipped with infrared cameras, it detects body heat in cold water, traces residual heat from discharged firearms, and captures the thermal signatures of high-speed vehicles. Beyond law enforcement, Eye is also used to monitor infrastructure vandalism, identify voltage anomalies in power lines, observe coastal and biodiversity zones, and track broader environmental degradation. The system is part of a growing suite of surveillance tools rolled out across Cape Town, including body-worn and dashboard cameras, ShotSpotter gunfire detection, closed-circuit television, and automatic number plate recognition. Over the past three years, the city has invested roughly R610 million in these technologies. While service providers have not been publicly named, it is widely known that the Argos II camera system — manufactured by German defence contractor HENSOLDT — is a core component of the Eye's surveillance arsenal. Argos II significantly enhances aerial monitoring capabilities, delivering high-resolution, real-time intelligence to enforcement and emergency response teams. The company, with ties to Israeli air defence and a record of supplying military-certified IFF Mode 5 (Identification Friend or Foe) systems, also holds contracts with European militaries. Its involvement has raised questions about the militarisation of public safety in Cape Town. This growing reliance on military-grade surveillance has drawn concern from civil society and privacy advocates. While the stated goal is public safety, critics argue that such technologies risk enabling excessive government oversight, mass data collection without consent, and the erosion of civil liberties. The city has provided limited information about how data captured by Eye is stored, used or shared. The absence of transparency has prompted calls for stronger regulatory oversight, public consultation and the development of safeguards to prevent abuse. Legal scholars have further underscored the need for clear privacy policies that align with the Protection of Personal Information Act (Popia) and uphold constitutional protections against unreasonable searches. These concerns are not unique to South Africa. Similar surveillance technologies have been deployed in occupied Palestine, where they function less as tools of public safety and more as instruments of population control. In cities such as Hebron and East Jerusalem — dubbed 'smart cities' — facial recognition cameras, drones, and predictive policing software track nearly every aspect of Palestinian life. In 2023, the Red Wolf facial recognition system was introduced at West Bank checkpoints without Palestinians' consent. This program categorises individuals using a color-coded system: red for those previously arrested, yellow for those deemed resistant to occupation, and green for those considered compliant. It forms part of an effort to build a biometric database exclusively of Palestinians, flagging individuals for detention or questioning, and mapping familial and social networks. Palestinians are conscripted into this system without their knowledge or consent. Blue Wolf, a mobile facial recognition app, is used during field operations and raids to photograph and log Palestinians, including minors, in real time. White Wolf gives Israeli settlers access to government databases to verify Palestinians' permit status — an alarming breach of privacy and a dangerous outsourcing of state surveillance. All of these systems feed into Wolf Pack, a centralised data-collection program that builds profiles on Palestinians, including names, addresses, family connections and vehicle registrations. This creation of an exclusive, ethnicity-based surveillance infrastructure establishes a digital racial hierarchy. As many have warned, databases built around ethnic identity seldom end in justice. As one anonymous former Israeli general stated: 'There is a lot of tension between basic human rights or privacy and military occupation … This is more about control than counterterrorism.' In other words, surveillance is the backbone of occupation. These practices are echoed in Cape Town, where recent crackdowns on Palestinian solidarity protests suggest a shift toward similar methods of population control. Surveillance tools such as EPIC devices have reportedly been deployed to monitor, track and profile protestors. Concurrently, meetings between Cape Town mayor Geordin Hill-Lewis and the South African Police Service have sought strategies to suppress dissent. These developments are especially troubling in light of the Democratic Alliance's controversial visit to Israel — condemned by South Africa's department of international relations and cooperation and contrary to the country's official stance on Palestine. The Eye in the Sky system raises significant legal concerns under section 14 of the Constitution of South Africa and the Protection of Personal Information Act. By capturing thermal imagery, facial data and behavioural patterns without consent or judicial oversight, the City risks violating constitutional protections against arbitrary surveillance. Popia mandates that personal information be collected lawfully and transparently. Yet, the absence of public-facing data policies — on retention, third-party sharing (including with foreign defence contractors), and mechanisms for redress — raises the possibility of unlawful surveillance practices. Ultimately, Cape Town's Eye in the Sky risks a dangerous global trend: the quiet normalisation of military-grade surveillance in civilian life. Surveillance becomes a silent border — policing movement, suppressing protest and deepening exclusion in ways that are difficult to see and harder to challenge. As digital surveillance becomes embedded in urban governance, the fundamental question is not just how technology is used, but who it serves. Without enforceable safeguards, transparent governance, and meaningful public consultation, these systems will serve power — not people. In a constitutional democracy like South Africa, a rights-based, legally compliant, and ethically sound approach to security must not be optional — it must be non-negotiable. Sõzarn Barday is a writer and attorney based in South Africa and has a particular interest in human rights in the Middle East. Opinions shared represent her individual perspective.

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