The conversation

City of Melbourne is delivering essential upgrades to our Safe City Camera Program (SCCP) as part of our broader commitment to improving safety and amenity in our city.

The purpose of the community engagement was to inform the community about the SCCP Policy, including its role and the proposed expansion of its use in the context of local laws and regulations.

Gathering insights

Community engagement on the draft Safe City Camera Policy took place from 8 October 2025 to 29 October 2025. It involved:

What we heard

We received 2,158 engagement responses, including 1,388 survey responses and 770 free text written submissions. We also received seven document submissions from stakeholders.

Overall, feedback gathered during the engagement showed a low level of concern for local laws issues and low levels of support for footage from the SCCP being used to investigate these issues.

Impact

The results of the engagement survey indicate low confidence from the community in City of Melbourne to manage the information collected by the SCCP. We used your feedback to make changes to the policy that reflect arrangements for non-Council owned cameras being monitored through the SCCP. We also added additional information from the Privacy Impact Assessment into the policy and made some minor editorial changes.

You can find out more about how our Safe City Cameras work in this Melbourne News article.

Next steps

Council would like to thank everyone who participated and took the time to provide feedback on the Draft SCCP Policy.

The revised Safe City Camera Policy was endorsed by Council at the Future Melbourne Committee Meeting on 2 December 2025.

The SCCP is undergoing a phased program of improvements. We will provide further information about future phases as it becomes available.

Safe City Camera Program