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Council approves $4.03M five‑year Axon contract after debate over drones, LPRs and translation features

Bristol City Council & Board of Finance · April 16, 2026

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Summary

After hours of presentations and public questions about privacy, operator access and facial‑recognition safeguards, the Bristol City Council approved a five‑year bundled contract with Axon Enterprise Inc. for $4,030,952.09 by a 5–2 roll‑call vote. The package includes upgraded body and in‑car cameras, Taser 10 devices, 13 LPRs and multiple drones with associated software.

The Bristol City Council approved a five‑year, $4,030,952.09 contract with Axon Enterprise Inc. covering upgrades to body‑worn and in‑car cameras, interview‑room cameras, Taser 10 devices, 13 license‑plate readers, and a suite of drones and supporting software, after extended public discussion and technical briefings.

Deputy Chief Robert Osborne described the package as a consolidation of mandated and desired equipment that would be covered over a five‑year term and said the department expects the first year to be cost‑neutral. "The newer version of the body‑worn cameras that we're looking at with the Axon contract ... allows the officers the ability to communicate with members of our community in over 50 languages," Osborne said. He also detailed proposed drone uses for safety, missing‑person searches, perimeter assessment and partner agency support.

Axon account manager Joe Piatek addressed operational and privacy questions from councilors, saying agency policy controls access and that livestreams can be shared to external partners (for example, fire chiefs) by secure link. "Everything's gonna be, in complete control of the agency and their policy," Piatek said. He and the deputy chief also described a public transparency portal that would show drone flight paths and deployment reasons.

Councilors pressed on several issues: whether any facial‑recognition software is included (company representatives said Axon does not provide facial recognition and has stepped away from that in recent years), how many officers could access live drone feeds, the kinds of streams included in the FUSIS real‑time intelligence system, and the cost tradeoffs between bundling and piecemeal purchases. The package used a bundled discount figure the vendor said saves roughly $5.4 million over five years compared with buying components individually.

After the discussion and a motion to approve the contract and authorize the mayor to sign, the council approved the measure on a 5–2 roll‑call vote. The deputy chief said the contract covers training, warranties, replacements and software and that some equipment would be refreshed at mid‑contract and/or at contract end.

Councilors and staff said policy development, explicit usage rules, and public transparency steps would be part of implementation. The contract authorizes the mayor to execute documents and directs staff to work with corporation counsel and the police department on accompanying policies and public‑facing transparency portals.