Model Legislation & Policy Language

Ready-to-Use Templates for Protecting Public Access

These model policies, legislative templates, and resolution examples are designed to be copied, customized, and used in your community. All language has been developed based on successful transparency policies and best practices.

How to Use These Resources

1

Choose Your Template

Select the policy type that matches your situation: city council resolution, administrative policy, or state legislation.

2

Customize for Your Jurisdiction

Replace bracketed text [like this] with your specific city, county, or state names and details.

3

Review with Legal Counsel

Have a local attorney review the language for compatibility with your jurisdiction's legal framework.

4

Build Coalition Support

Share drafts with allies (journalists, civil liberties groups, community organizations) before formal introduction.

City Council Resolution Template

Non-Binding Statement of Policy Principles

A resolution is a formal statement of the council's position. While typically non-binding, resolutions establish policy direction and create political pressure. Use this as a first step before pursuing binding ordinances.

Resolution Opposing Full Police Radio Encryption

RESOLUTION NO. [NUMBER]

A RESOLUTION OF THE [CITY/TOWN/COUNTY] OF [JURISDICTION NAME]
EXPRESSING OPPOSITION TO FULL ENCRYPTION OF POLICE RADIO
COMMUNICATIONS AND SUPPORTING PUBLIC ACCESS TO NON-SENSITIVE
POLICE DISPATCH INFORMATION

WHEREAS, the [City/Town/County] of [Jurisdiction Name] is committed to
transparency, accountability, and public trust in law enforcement; and

WHEREAS, public access to police radio communications has existed for
over seven decades, enabling community awareness of public safety
incidents, independent oversight of police activities, and real-time
emergency alerts for residents; and

WHEREAS, police scanner access has documented public safety value,
including during the Highland Park, Illinois mass shooting on July 4,
2022, when open scanner access enabled residents to take protective
action and locate family members before official alerts were issued; and

WHEREAS, research by the Radio Television Digital News Association
(RTDNA), the Society of Professional Journalists (SPJ), and other
journalism organizations has found that police radio encryption
significantly impairs the ability of news media to report on public
safety incidents, reducing government accountability; and

WHEREAS, there is no documented evidence that public scanner access
has caused harm to law enforcement officers or compromised legitimate
police operations; and

WHEREAS, the claimed benefits of encryption—including officer safety
and victim privacy—can be achieved through less restrictive means
such as hybrid radio systems that encrypt only sensitive tactical
channels while maintaining open dispatch communications; and

WHEREAS, full encryption of police communications eliminates the
ability of the public to independently verify police accounts of
incidents, reducing accountability and potentially enabling misconduct; and

WHEREAS, communities across the nation have successfully maintained
public safety while preserving open police communications, demonstrating
that transparency and safety are not mutually exclusive; and

WHEREAS, the cost of implementing and maintaining encrypted radio
systems represents a significant expenditure of public funds, estimated
at $[AMOUNT] for initial implementation and $[AMOUNT] annually for
ongoing maintenance, with no demonstrated return on investment;

NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED by the [City Council/Board of
Supervisors/Governing Body] of the [City/Town/County] of [Jurisdiction
Name] as follows:

Section 1. The [Governing Body] hereby expresses its opposition to
the implementation of full encryption of [Police Department] radio
communications that would eliminate public access to dispatch and
patrol communications.

Section 2. The [Governing Body] supports a hybrid approach to police
radio communications that:
   (a) Maintains open, publicly accessible dispatch and patrol channels
       for routine police communications;
   (b) Allows encryption of specific tactical channels for legitimate
       sensitive operations including SWAT operations, undercover
       activities, and active hostage situations;
   (c) Preserves the ability of news media, emergency responders, and
       the public to monitor police activities in real-time.

Section 3. The [Governing Body] directs the [Police Chief/City Manager]
to:
   (a) Provide a written report within 60 days detailing any current
       encryption plans, associated costs, and alternatives considered;
   (b) Conduct a public hearing before any implementation of encryption
       that would reduce public access to police communications;
   (c) Consult with local news media organizations, civil liberties
       groups, and community stakeholders before making changes to
       radio communication policies.

Section 4. The [Governing Body] affirms its commitment to police
transparency and accountability as essential elements of democratic
governance and community trust.

Section 5. Copies of this Resolution shall be transmitted to the
[Police Chief], [City Manager], local news media organizations, and
the [State Press Association].

PASSED AND ADOPTED by the [Governing Body] of the [City/Town/County]
of [Jurisdiction Name] this [DAY] day of [MONTH], [YEAR].

_______________________________
[Mayor/Chair/Presiding Officer]

ATTEST:

_______________________________
[City Clerk/Secretary]

Municipal Ordinance Template

Binding Law Requiring Transparency

An ordinance creates binding legal requirements. This template establishes a legal framework requiring public access to police communications with narrow exceptions for legitimate sensitive operations. This is a stronger tool than a resolution but requires more political support.

Police Communications Transparency Ordinance

ORDINANCE NO. [NUMBER]

AN ORDINANCE OF THE [CITY/TOWN/COUNTY] OF [JURISDICTION NAME]
ESTABLISHING REQUIREMENTS FOR PUBLIC ACCESS TO POLICE RADIO
COMMUNICATIONS AND REGULATING THE USE OF ENCRYPTION TECHNOLOGY

THE [CITY COUNCIL/BOARD OF SUPERVISORS] OF THE [CITY/TOWN/COUNTY]
OF [JURISDICTION NAME] DOES ORDAIN AS FOLLOWS:

SECTION 1. PURPOSE AND FINDINGS

(a) Purpose. The purpose of this Ordinance is to preserve public
access to police radio communications as a means of promoting
transparency, accountability, and community safety, while allowing
for reasonable exceptions to protect legitimate law enforcement
operational needs.

(b) Findings. The [Governing Body] finds and declares that:
    (1) Public access to police radio communications has existed
        since the advent of police radio technology and serves
        important democratic functions;
    (2) Open police communications enable independent oversight of
        law enforcement, real-time emergency alerts to the public,
        and accurate news reporting on public safety matters;
    (3) There is no documented evidence that public scanner access
        has caused harm to law enforcement officers or compromised
        legitimate police operations;
    (4) Full encryption of police communications would eliminate
        public oversight without demonstrated public safety benefit;
    (5) A hybrid approach to police communications can protect
        legitimate operational security needs while preserving
        public access to routine communications.

SECTION 2. DEFINITIONS

For purposes of this Ordinance:

(a) "Dispatch communications" means radio communications between
    dispatchers and field officers relating to calls for service,
    officer assignments, incident reports, and routine patrol
    activities.

(b) "Encryption" means the use of technology to render radio
    communications unintelligible to persons without authorized
    decryption capability.

(c) "Police Department" means the [Jurisdiction] Police Department
    and any successor agency.

(d) "Sensitive tactical communications" means communications
    relating to:
    (1) Active SWAT or hostage rescue operations;
    (2) Undercover officer identities or locations;
    (3) Witness protection information;
    (4) Specific investigative techniques in ongoing investigations;
    (5) Confidential informant identities.

SECTION 3. PUBLIC ACCESS REQUIREMENTS

(a) General Requirement. The Police Department shall maintain
    public access to dispatch communications through unencrypted
    radio frequencies that can be monitored by members of the
    public using commercially available radio scanning equipment.

(b) Prohibited Actions. The Police Department shall not:
    (1) Implement full encryption of all radio communications;
    (2) Implement encryption of dispatch communications;
    (3) Implement systems that delay public access to dispatch
        communications by more than [5/10] minutes;
    (4) Take other actions that have the effect of eliminating
        or substantially reducing public access to routine
        police communications.

(c) Permitted Encryption. The Police Department may encrypt:
    (1) Sensitive tactical communications as defined in Section 2(d);
    (2) Communications on dedicated tactical channels used
        exclusively for sensitive operations;
    (3) Mobile data terminal (MDT) transmissions containing
        personal identifying information.

SECTION 4. PROCEDURAL REQUIREMENTS

(a) Prior Approval. Any change to radio communication systems or
    policies that would reduce public access to police communications
    shall require prior approval by the [City Council/Governing Body]
    following a public hearing.

(b) Public Hearing. Before approving any such change, the
    [Governing Body] shall:
    (1) Provide at least 30 days public notice of the proposed change;
    (2) Conduct a public hearing at which interested parties may
        present testimony;
    (3) Consider alternatives that would preserve public access;
    (4) Make written findings that the proposed change is necessary
        and that no less restrictive alternative is available.

(c) Annual Report. The Police Department shall submit an annual
    report to the [Governing Body] describing:
    (1) The current status of radio communication systems;
    (2) Any use of encryption and the justification therefor;
    (3) Any complaints or concerns regarding public access;
    (4) Costs associated with radio communication systems.

SECTION 5. ENFORCEMENT

(a) Violation. Any action by the Police Department in violation
    of this Ordinance shall be void and of no effect.

(b) Remedies. Any resident of [Jurisdiction] may bring an action
    in [appropriate court] to enforce the provisions of this
    Ordinance. A prevailing plaintiff shall be entitled to
    reasonable attorney's fees and costs.

SECTION 6. SEVERABILITY

If any provision of this Ordinance or its application to any
person or circumstance is held invalid, the remainder of the
Ordinance and the application to other persons or circumstances
shall not be affected.

SECTION 7. EFFECTIVE DATE

This Ordinance shall take effect [30/60] days after adoption.

PASSED AND ADOPTED by the [Governing Body] of [Jurisdiction]
this [DAY] day of [MONTH], [YEAR].

_______________________________
[Mayor/Chair]

ATTEST:

_______________________________
[City Clerk]

APPROVED AS TO FORM:

_______________________________
[City Attorney]

State Legislation Template

Statewide Protection of Scanner Access

State legislation can protect scanner access across all jurisdictions within the state. This template is modeled on successful transparency legislation and can be adapted to your state's legislative format and existing code structure.

Real-World Example: Colorado HB21-1250

In 2021, Colorado became the first state to pass legislation requiring police encryption policies to include media access provisions. The law requires agencies with encrypted systems to create "communications access policies" for news media. While implementation challenges remain, Colorado's approach offers a legislative template for other states. Read the full case study to see how the legislative strategy succeeded.

Police Communications Transparency Act

[STATE] POLICE COMMUNICATIONS TRANSPARENCY ACT

AN ACT relating to public access to police radio communications;
requiring law enforcement agencies to maintain public access to
dispatch communications; providing exceptions; providing penalties;
and providing an effective date.

BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF [STATE]:

SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE

This Act may be cited as the "[State] Police Communications
Transparency Act."

SECTION 2. LEGISLATIVE FINDINGS AND PURPOSE

(a) The Legislature finds that:
    (1) Public access to police radio communications serves vital
        functions in a democratic society, including enabling
        independent oversight of law enforcement, providing real-time
        emergency information to the public, and facilitating
        accurate news reporting on matters of public concern;
    (2) For over seven decades, members of the public have legally
        monitored police radio communications, contributing to
        community safety and government accountability;
    (3) The increasing trend toward encryption of police radio
        communications threatens these democratic values without
        demonstrated public safety benefit;
    (4) Law enforcement agencies can protect legitimate operational
        security needs through targeted encryption of sensitive
        tactical communications without eliminating public access
        to routine dispatch communications;
    (5) Statewide standards are necessary to ensure consistent
        public access across all jurisdictions.

(b) The purpose of this Act is to preserve public access to police
    radio communications while providing reasonable exceptions for
    legitimate law enforcement operational needs.

SECTION 3. DEFINITIONS

As used in this Act:

(a) "Dispatch communications" means radio communications between
    dispatchers and law enforcement officers relating to calls
    for service, officer assignments, incident status, and
    routine patrol activities.

(b) "Encryption" means the use of technology to render radio
    communications unintelligible to persons without authorized
    decryption capability, including but not limited to digital
    encryption, scrambling, and trunked radio systems that
    prevent public monitoring.

(c) "Law enforcement agency" means any state, county, municipal,
    or other governmental agency employing peace officers,
    including but not limited to police departments, sheriff's
    offices, state police, and campus police departments.

(d) "Sensitive tactical communications" means communications
    directly relating to:
    (1) Active tactical operations where officer safety would
        be immediately endangered by public disclosure;
    (2) The identity or location of undercover officers;
    (3) Witness protection operations;
    (4) Active hostage or barricade situations during the
        tactical response phase;
    (5) Specific surveillance targets in ongoing investigations.

SECTION 4. PUBLIC ACCESS REQUIREMENTS

(a) General Requirement. Every law enforcement agency in this
    state shall maintain at least one radio frequency or channel
    for dispatch communications that is accessible to members
    of the public using commercially available radio scanning
    equipment without encryption, delay, or other technological
    barriers to real-time monitoring.

(b) Minimum Access. The publicly accessible frequency or channel
    shall include, at minimum:
    (1) Dispatch of officers to calls for service;
    (2) Initial incident reports and status updates;
    (3) Officer location and availability information;
    (4) Traffic stops and enforcement activities;
    (5) Emergency notifications and alerts.

(c) Prohibited Actions. No law enforcement agency shall:
    (1) Implement encryption of all radio communications;
    (2) Implement encryption of dispatch communications;
    (3) Implement systems that delay public access to dispatch
        communications by more than five (5) minutes;
    (4) Use trunked radio systems in a manner that prevents
        public monitoring of dispatch communications;
    (5) Take other actions designed or intended to eliminate
        public access to routine police communications.

SECTION 5. EXCEPTIONS

(a) Permitted Encryption. A law enforcement agency may encrypt
    radio communications that constitute sensitive tactical
    communications as defined in Section 3(d), provided that:
    (1) Encryption is limited to dedicated tactical channels
        used exclusively for sensitive operations;
    (2) Dispatch communications remain publicly accessible;
    (3) The agency documents the justification for encryption
        of each tactical channel.

(b) Mobile Data. This Act does not require public access to
    mobile data terminal (MDT) communications or computer-aided
    dispatch (CAD) data transmissions containing personal
    identifying information protected by other state or
    federal law.

(c) Federal Requirements. This Act does not prevent compliance
    with federal law or regulations requiring encryption of
    specific communications, provided that the agency maintains
    public access to dispatch communications to the maximum
    extent permitted by federal law.

SECTION 6. ENFORCEMENT

(a) Complaint Process. Any person may file a complaint with the
    [State Attorney General/appropriate agency] alleging a
    violation of this Act. The [Attorney General] shall
    investigate complaints and may issue orders requiring
    compliance.

(b) Civil Action. Any person aggrieved by a violation of this
    Act may bring a civil action in [appropriate court] for:
    (1) Declaratory relief;
    (2) Injunctive relief;
    (3) Actual damages or statutory damages of $[1,000] per
        day of violation, whichever is greater;
    (4) Reasonable attorney's fees and costs.

(c) No Immunity. A law enforcement agency shall not be entitled
    to sovereign immunity or governmental immunity as a defense
    to an action under this section.

SECTION 7. REPORTING

(a) Annual Report. Each law enforcement agency shall submit an
    annual report to the [Legislature/oversight body] describing:
    (1) The agency's radio communication systems and policies;
    (2) Any use of encryption and the justification therefor;
    (3) Costs associated with radio communication systems;
    (4) Any complaints regarding public access.

(b) Statewide Summary. The [Attorney General/oversight agency]
    shall compile a statewide summary of agency reports and
    submit an annual report to the Legislature assessing
    compliance with this Act.

SECTION 8. EXISTING SYSTEMS

(a) Compliance Timeline. Law enforcement agencies with radio
    systems that do not comply with this Act as of the
    effective date shall come into compliance within
    [12/18/24] months.

(b) Waiver. The [Attorney General] may grant a temporary
    waiver of up to [12] additional months for agencies
    demonstrating good faith efforts to achieve compliance
    where technical or financial constraints prevent
    immediate compliance.

SECTION 9. SEVERABILITY

If any provision of this Act or its application to any person
or circumstance is held invalid, the invalidity does not
affect other provisions or applications of this Act which
can be given effect without the invalid provision or
application.

SECTION 10. EFFECTIVE DATE

This Act takes effect on [DATE/upon passage].

Department Policy Template: Hybrid Radio System

Administrative Policy for Police Departments

This template provides language for a department-level policy implementing a hybrid approach. It can be adopted administratively by police leadership or required by city council. This is useful when working directly with cooperative police chiefs or when encryption is already being considered.

Radio Communications Transparency Policy

[POLICE DEPARTMENT] POLICY DIRECTIVE

SUBJECT: Radio Communications and Public Access
POLICY NUMBER: [NUMBER]
EFFECTIVE DATE: [DATE]
SUPERSEDES: [Previous policy if any]

I. PURPOSE

This policy establishes guidelines for police radio communications
that balance operational security needs with the Department's
commitment to transparency and public accountability. The policy
implements a hybrid approach that maintains public access to
routine communications while protecting genuinely sensitive
tactical information.

II. POLICY STATEMENT

The [Police Department] recognizes that public access to police
radio communications:
- Enhances community awareness of public safety conditions
- Enables independent oversight of police activities
- Supports accurate news reporting on matters of public concern
- Contributes to public trust in law enforcement
- Provides real-time emergency information to residents

The Department is committed to preserving public access to
routine police communications while implementing targeted
protections for communications that would genuinely compromise
officer safety or operational effectiveness.

III. DEFINITIONS

A. "Open Channel" - A radio frequency or talkgroup that is not
   encrypted and can be monitored by members of the public using
   commercially available scanning equipment.

B. "Encrypted Channel" - A radio frequency or talkgroup using
   encryption technology that prevents monitoring by persons
   without authorized decryption keys.

C. "Dispatch Communications" - Radio traffic between dispatchers
   and field units relating to calls for service, unit
   assignments, incident status, and routine patrol activities.

D. "Tactical Communications" - Radio traffic relating to active
   tactical operations including SWAT deployments, undercover
   operations, and similar sensitive activities.

IV. CHANNEL ASSIGNMENTS

A. Open Channels (Publicly Accessible)

   The following communications shall be conducted on open,
   unencrypted channels:

   1. Primary dispatch channel(s) for all patrol divisions
   2. Calls for service and unit assignments
   3. Traffic stops and enforcement activities
   4. Routine backup requests
   5. Incident status updates
   6. Officer location and availability
   7. Non-sensitive inter-unit communications
   8. Fire and EMS dispatch coordination
   9. Public event communications (parades, festivals, etc.)

B. Encrypted Channels (Restricted Access)

   The following communications may be conducted on encrypted
   channels when operationally necessary:

   1. SWAT tactical operations (during active deployment only)
   2. Undercover officer communications
   3. Surveillance operations
   4. Witness protection details
   5. Hostage negotiation (tactical coordination only)
   6. VIP protection details
   7. Intelligence-related communications
   8. Internal affairs investigations

C. Channel Selection Guidelines

   Officers shall use open channels unless:
   1. The communication falls within a category listed in
      Section IV.B above;
   2. A supervisor has specifically authorized encrypted
      communications for the operation;
   3. The communication would immediately endanger an
      officer or civilian if publicly disclosed.

   When in doubt, officers shall use open channels.

V. PROHIBITED PRACTICES

The following practices are prohibited:

A. Using encrypted channels for routine patrol communications
   to avoid public monitoring;

B. Conducting dispatch operations on encrypted channels;

C. Migrating routine communications to encrypted channels
   without documented operational justification;

D. Refusing to provide information to news media that has
   been broadcast on open channels;

E. Retaliating against officers for using open channels
   appropriately.

VI. IMPLEMENTATION

A. Technical Requirements

   1. The Department shall maintain sufficient open channel
      capacity to handle all dispatch and routine patrol
      communications;
   2. Open channels shall be properly documented in public
      frequency databases;
   3. The Department shall not implement technologies that
      prevent or unreasonably impede public monitoring of
      open channels.

B. Training

   1. All officers shall receive training on this policy
      during initial academy and annual in-service training;
   2. Training shall emphasize the Department's commitment
      to transparency and the criteria for channel selection;
   3. Dispatchers shall receive specific training on routing
      communications to appropriate channels.

C. Supervision

   1. Supervisors shall monitor channel usage and correct
      inappropriate use of encrypted channels;
   2. Supervisors shall document any patterns of policy
      violations;
   3. The Communications Division shall provide monthly
      reports on channel usage patterns.

VII. REVIEW AND REPORTING

A. Annual Review

   This policy shall be reviewed annually by the [Chief of
   Police/designee] in consultation with:
   1. Local news media organizations
   2. Community advisory boards
   3. Civil liberties organizations
   4. Police union representatives

B. Public Reporting

   The Department shall include in its annual report:
   1. Summary of radio system configuration
   2. Statistics on encrypted vs. open channel usage
   3. Any changes to channel assignments
   4. Community feedback received

VIII. EFFECTIVE DATE

This policy is effective immediately upon issuance and
supersedes all prior policies and practices inconsistent
with its provisions.

_______________________________
[Chief of Police]
[Date]

Public Meeting Resources

Templates for City Council Testimony and Written Comments

These templates help advocates prepare for public meetings. Most city councils allow 2-3 minutes for public comment. Written comments can be submitted for the record and are often more detailed.

2-Minute Public Comment Script

Good evening, Mayor and Council Members. My name is
[NAME] and I'm a resident of [NEIGHBORHOOD/ADDRESS].

I'm here to urge you to oppose full encryption of
police radio communications.

For over 70 years, residents have legally monitored
police scanners. This access serves three vital
functions:

FIRST, public safety. During the Highland Park
shooting on July 4, 2022, open scanner access
helped residents take cover and find family members
before any official alerts were issued.

SECOND, accountability. Scanner access enables
independent verification of police conduct. When
radios go silent, we only hear the police version
of events.

THIRD, community awareness. Residents use scanners
to stay informed about emergencies in their
neighborhoods—information that official alerts
often provide too late.

The police department claims encryption is needed
for officer safety, but there's no documented
evidence that scanner access has ever harmed an
officer. Zero cases.

I urge you to require a hybrid approach: keep
routine dispatch open while allowing encryption
only for truly sensitive tactical operations.

Transparency and safety are not opposites. We
can have both.

Thank you.

Written Comment Template

TO: [City Council/Police Commission]
FROM: [Your Name], [Address]
DATE: [Date]
RE: Opposition to Full Police Radio Encryption

Dear Council Members:

I write to express strong opposition to any proposal
to fully encrypt [Police Department] radio
communications. I urge you to reject full encryption
and instead require a hybrid approach that preserves
public access to routine dispatch communications.

PUBLIC SAFETY VALUE

Open scanner access has proven public safety value.
During the Highland Park, Illinois mass shooting on
July 4, 2022, open scanner access enabled residents
to take protective action 15-30 minutes before
official alerts were issued. Similar benefits have
been documented during wildfires, severe weather,
and other emergencies.

NO EVIDENCE OF HARM

Proponents of encryption cite officer safety, but
there is no documented evidence that public scanner
access has ever resulted in harm to a law enforcement
officer. I challenge the department to produce a
single verified case.

ACCOUNTABILITY CONCERNS

Full encryption eliminates the ability of residents,
journalists, and oversight bodies to independently
monitor police activities. This reduction in
transparency comes at a time when communities
nationwide are demanding more accountability,
not less.

HYBRID ALTERNATIVE

A hybrid approach—maintaining open dispatch channels
while encrypting specific tactical channels for
sensitive operations—addresses legitimate operational
security needs without eliminating public access.
Many departments successfully use this approach.

FISCAL RESPONSIBILITY

Full encryption costs millions to implement and
maintain, with no demonstrated return on investment.
These funds would be better spent on evidence-based
programs with proven public safety benefits.

RECOMMENDATION

I urge you to:
1. Reject any proposal for full encryption
2. Require a public hearing before any encryption
   implementation
3. Mandate a hybrid approach preserving dispatch access
4. Require annual reporting on radio system policies

Thank you for your consideration.

Respectfully,
[Signature]
[Printed Name]
[Address]
[Email]
[Phone]

Email Templates for Officials

Ready-to-Send Messages for Different Situations

Email to City Council Member

Subject: Oppose Police Radio Encryption - Preserve
Public Access

Dear Council Member [NAME],

As your constituent, I urge you to oppose any
proposal to fully encrypt [City] Police Department
radio communications.

Public scanner access has existed for over 70 years
and serves vital functions:

• SAFETY: Residents receive real-time emergency
  alerts faster than official notification systems
• ACCOUNTABILITY: Independent monitoring helps
  ensure police conduct is observable
• TRUST: Transparency builds community confidence
  in law enforcement

There is no documented evidence that scanner access
has ever harmed a police officer—the primary
justification given for encryption.

I support a HYBRID approach that keeps routine
dispatch communications open while allowing
encryption for truly sensitive tactical operations
(SWAT, undercover work, etc.). This balanced
approach is used successfully by many departments.

Before any encryption decision, I ask that you:
1. Require a public hearing with community input
2. Demand evidence of the claimed benefits
3. Consider the cost (often $5-15 million) versus
   proven alternatives
4. Ensure news media and civil liberties groups
   are consulted

I would appreciate knowing your position on this
issue. May I count on your support for transparency?

Thank you for your service.

[Your Name]
[Address]
[Phone]

Email to Police Chief

Subject: Request for Information on Radio
Encryption Plans

Dear Chief [NAME],

I am writing as a concerned resident to inquire
about the [Police Department's] current radio
communication policies and any plans regarding
encryption.

Specifically, I would appreciate information on:

1. Does the department currently use any encrypted
   radio channels? If so, which operations use
   encryption?

2. Is the department considering expanding
   encryption to additional channels, including
   dispatch communications?

3. If encryption expansion is planned, what is the
   projected cost and timeline?

4. Has the department considered a hybrid approach
   that maintains open dispatch while encrypting
   only tactical channels?

5. What evidence does the department have that
   current public scanner access has created
   safety or operational problems?

6. Will there be opportunities for public input
   before any encryption decisions are made?

I recognize the department has legitimate
operational security needs. I believe these can
be addressed through targeted encryption of
sensitive tactical channels without eliminating
public access to routine dispatch communications.

I look forward to your response and would welcome
the opportunity to discuss this further.

Respectfully,

[Your Name]
[Address]
[Phone]
[Email]

FOIA Request for Encryption Information

VIA EMAIL: [records@city.gov]

[Date]

[City] Police Department
ATTN: Records Division / FOIA Officer
[Address]

RE: [State] Freedom of Information Act Request

Dear FOIA Officer:

Pursuant to the [State] Freedom of Information Act,
[cite state statute], I request access to and copies
of the following records:

1. All documents relating to police radio encryption,
   including but not limited to:
   a. Proposals, plans, or studies regarding
      encryption implementation
   b. Cost estimates or budgets for encryption systems
   c. Vendor proposals, contracts, or communications
   d. Internal memoranda discussing encryption

2. All policies, procedures, or guidelines governing
   police radio communications and encryption

3. Any communications between the police department
   and [city council/city manager] regarding
   encryption of police radio communications

4. Any complaints, concerns, or incidents involving
   public scanner access to police communications,
   including any documented cases of scanner access
   causing harm to officers or operations

5. Records of meetings, presentations, or
   discussions with radio equipment vendors
   (including Motorola, Harris, etc.) regarding
   encryption systems

6. Any communications with other law enforcement
   agencies regarding encryption implementation

TIMEFRAME: January 1, [YEAR-5] to present

FORMAT: I request electronic copies in PDF format
where available.

FEES: I am willing to pay reasonable fees up to
$[AMOUNT]. Please contact me if fees will exceed
this amount before processing the request.

EXPEDITED PROCESSING: [If applicable, explain
urgency - pending council vote, etc.]

Please respond within the timeframe required by
[state FOIA statute, typically 5-10 business days].

Thank you for your assistance.

[Your Name]
[Address]
[Phone]
[Email]

Key Provisions Checklist

Essential Elements for Any Transparency Policy

When drafting or evaluating transparency legislation, ensure these key elements are included:

âś… Access Requirements

  • Explicit requirement for publicly accessible dispatch channel(s)
  • Definition of what communications must remain open
  • Prohibition on delays exceeding 5-10 minutes
  • Requirement for commercially available scanning access

âś… Narrow Exceptions

  • Clearly defined list of operations that may use encryption
  • Requirement that exceptions be genuinely necessary
  • Limitation to dedicated tactical channels, not all communications
  • Documentation requirement for encrypted channel use

âś… Procedural Protections

  • Public hearing required before encryption changes
  • Advance notice to news media and stakeholders
  • Written findings requirement for any access reduction
  • Consideration of alternatives mandate

âś… Accountability Mechanisms

  • Annual reporting on radio system policies
  • Community input process
  • Enforcement mechanism (civil action, complaint process)
  • Attorney's fees provision for successful challengers

âś… Implementation

  • Clear effective date
  • Compliance timeline for existing non-compliant systems
  • Training requirements
  • Severability clause

⚠️ Watch Out For

  • Vague "operational necessity" exceptions
  • Unlimited delay provisions (30+ minutes = no real-time access)
  • Police department self-determination of what to encrypt
  • No enforcement mechanism
  • No public input requirement

Take Action for Transparency

Your voice matters. Here are concrete ways to advocate for open police communications in your community.

đź“§

Contact Your Representatives

Use our templates to email your local officials about police radio encryption policies.

Get Started
📚

Read Case Studies

See how encryption has affected real communities - from Highland Park to Chicago.

View Cases
📢

Spread Awareness

Share evidence about police radio encryption with your network and community.

📊

See the Evidence

Review the facts, myths, and research on police radio encryption.

View Evidence
🎤

Public Testimony

Learn how to speak effectively at city council and public safety meetings.

Prepare to Speak
📥

Download Resources

Get FOIA templates, talking points, and materials for advocacy.

Access Toolkit