Nashville’s added surveillance cameras have some concerned

Nashville authorities have steadily increased the use of surveillance cameras to monitor crime, or try to deter it.

Now a new proposal could rein in Metro’s use of such technology.

A bill up for consideration this week sponsored by Bellevue Councilman Dave Rosenberg would insert the Metro Council into the approval process for any future cameras and devices and ban devices known as ‘license plate readers,’ which log vehicles as they come and go.

“We’re headed in the direction of a very Orwellian society, if we’re not there already,” Rosenberg told WPLN. “Mostly I’d like to make sure that we’re striking an appropriate balance between public safety and privacy rights.”

The councilman describes a scenario in which the movement of a resident could be followed over long distances, including through increasingly available facial recognition technologies.

His proposal would govern a wide array of ‘surveillance technology’—a term Rosenberg details with a lengthy and methodical list of what he has in mind, including:
Biometric surveillance technology;
X-ray vans;
Surveillance enabled or capable light bulbs or light fixtures;
Through-the-wall radar or similar imaging technology, and;
Predictive policing software.

Rosenberg also points to a new license plate reader installed on a pole at a key entry point to the small independent city of Belle Meade.
“It’s not there to look for a fugitive,” he said. “It is there to see who is coming in and out of Belle Meade.”

In terms of more traditional cameras, Nashville has added dozens in recent years.

Metro police said the department now has 83 cameras (typically visible with a glowing blue light) and investigators use them often.

The Metropolitan Dev-elopment and Housing Agency has about as many. Between 2013 and 2015, MDHA installed 60 cameras, with plans for more.

“The cameras are hard to ignore,” said Rodney Northington, a 27-year-old resident of MDHA’s Cayce Homes in East Nashville. He questions whether authorities need cameras in addition to the steady patrol presence he notices, saying they erode trust.

Yet Councilman Rosen-berg said he has already heard from police about the benefits of cameras in investigations, so he plans to tweak his initial wording after first introduction at the council meeting Tuesday.

He also notes he’s not meddling with security at homes or private businesses—only gear placed on public property used for government surveillance.

Metro report highlights affordability gap for African Americans in Nashville

A new Metro Social Services report finds African Americans in Nashville face higher poverty, housing cost burdens, and shorter life expectancy despite the city’s strong

Trump’s mail-in voting executive order faces legal challenges

Civil rights groups, state leaders, and attorneys general are suing to block Trump’s mail-in voting executive order, arguing it threatens voter access and state election

Black Press continues legacy of advocacy and truth-telling as it nears 200 years

As the Black Press nears 200 years, Black-owned newspapers still champion truth-telling, advocacy, and community storytelling from Freedom’s Journal to today’s Black Press Sunday.

“Earthrise,” “Earth Day” and “Earthset”

From Apollo 8’s iconic “Earthrise” to Artemis II’s new “Earthset,” this Earth Day reflections piece links space images, climate change, and Nashville Earth Day 2026.

What to do when inheriting a house that is paid off

Inheriting a house that is paid off gives you instant equity, but your next steps—legal transfer, repairs, and whether to sell, keep, or rent—determine its