⚠ The El Paso Flock Safety contract expires May 16, 2026. Tell your council member to cancel it.  Contact them now →

The contract expires May 16.
Make your voice heard now.

El Paso is not Flock's customer.
El Paso residents are the product.

We are calling on El Paso City Council to cancel the Flock Safety contract and not renew it. We oppose this vendor and any similar private, venture-backed surveillance company that profits from El Paso residents' data. If the city insists on renewing despite public opposition, we demand the minimum conditions listed on our facts page — but our position is clear: the contract should end on May 16.

The business model is the problem

Flock Safety is not a public safety company that happens to collect data. It is a data company that uses public safety as its entry point. The price tells you everything.

$7,500,000,000
Flock Safety's valuation — a Georgia startup with $950 million in venture capital
$4,683
What El Paso paid per camera per year — 150 cameras, $702,500 total, 24/7 surveillance of a major border city

How does a company justify a $7.5 billion valuation by charging less than $5,000 per camera per year? The hardware is not the product. The network is. Every city Flock enters adds to a massive, interconnected database of vehicle movements across America. That database — your routes, your patterns, your life — is what investors are valuing at $7.5 billion.

El Paso didn't buy a public safety tool. El Paso gave a private company free access to photograph every vehicle in our city, 24 hours a day, in exchange for hardware that costs less than a used car per year.

This is not a vendor accountability problem that better contract terms can fix. This is a business model problem. The only solution is to not participate in it.

What we support instead

If El Paso wants license plate reader technology, it should be locally governed and locally accountable — owned and controlled by the city, under ordinance, with elected officials answerable to residents. Not a venture-backed startup in Georgia that needs to justify a $7.5 billion valuation to investors. Public safety tools should serve the public — not a private data network.

Three ways to make an impact

Start with whichever feels easiest. All three together take less than 15 minutes.

What to say when you call

You'll likely reach a staffer, not the representative directly. That's fine — staffers log every call. Be polite, be clear, and stick to the script.

Phone script — 2 minutes
"Hi, my name is [YOUR NAME] and I'm a resident of El Paso, District [YOUR DISTRICT]. I'm calling about the Flock Safety license plate reader contract, which expires on May 16th. I want [REPRESENTATIVE NAME] to know that I am opposed to renewing this contract. Flock Safety has a documented record of security failures — 22 confirmed vulnerabilities in the federal cybersecurity database, cameras that can be hacked in 30 seconds, and officer passwords found for sale on the dark web. The company also quietly deleted the clause prohibiting data sales from its contract in February 2026. El Paso paid less than $5,000 per camera per year for 150 cameras that photograph every vehicle in our city around the clock. Flock is valued at $7.5 billion. El Paso residents are not Flock's customer — we are their product. I am asking [REPRESENTATIVE NAME] to vote against renewing the Flock contract and to support locally governed alternatives that keep El Paso's data in El Paso's hands. Can I count on [REPRESENTATIVE NAME] to oppose this renewal? Thank you."
Replace [YOUR NAME], [YOUR DISTRICT], and [REPRESENTATIVE NAME] before calling.

What to send

Keep it focused. A clear, personal message is more effective than a long one.

Email — subject line
Please vote NO on Flock Safety contract renewal — May 16 expiration
Email — body
Dear [REPRESENTATIVE NAME], My name is [YOUR NAME] and I am a resident of El Paso, District [YOUR DISTRICT]. I am writing to ask you to oppose the renewal of the City's contract with Flock Safety, which expires on May 16, 2026. My concerns are straightforward: Flock Safety's cameras run Android 8.1 — an operating system discontinued in 2021 that will never receive another security update. The federal cybersecurity database lists 22 confirmed vulnerabilities. Cameras can be physically hacked in 30 seconds. Officer login credentials have been found for sale on dark web markets. In February 2026, Flock rewrote its Terms of Service with 147 changes — including deleting the clause that previously stated they would not sell customer data. El Paso PD's own transparency portal lists a Harris County commissioner's office — not a law enforcement agency — as having access to our camera data, with no public explanation. ICE's own Privacy Impact Assessment (DHS/ICE/PIA-039) requires audit logs to be provided to ICE — not to local police. EPPD cannot independently verify who has searched El Paso's data. This is a border city. That matters. El Paso paid less than $5,000 per camera per year for 150 cameras photographing every vehicle in our city around the clock. Flock Safety is valued at $7.5 billion. El Paso residents are not Flock's customer — we are their product. More than 30 cities have canceled their Flock contracts. El Paso should join them. I am asking you to vote against renewing this contract and to support an open process to evaluate locally governed alternatives — tools owned and controlled by El Paso, accountable to El Paso elected officials. Thank you for your service to our community. Respectfully, [YOUR NAME] [YOUR ADDRESS / NEIGHBORHOOD] [YOUR PHONE — optional]
Replace all [BRACKETED] fields before sending. Find your representative's email in the contact list below.

El Paso City Council — contact list

Don't know your district? Find it here →

Mayor — citywide

Renard Johnson

Voted against letting the contract expire — March 3
District 1 — Northwest

Alejandra Chávez

Voted against letting the contract expire
District 2 — Northeast

Dr. Josh Acevedo

Voted against letting the contract expire
District 3 — Eastside

Deanna Maldonado-Rocha

Voted against letting the contract expire
District 4 — Lower Valley

Cynthia Boyar Trejo

Voted against letting the contract expire
District 5 — Upper Valley

Ivan Niño

Voted against letting the contract expire
District 6 — Central / Westside

Art Fierro

Voted against letting the contract expire
District 7 — Mission Valley ★ Ally

Lily Limón

✓ Voted to let the contract expire
District 8 — Northeast / Fort Bliss ★ Ally

Chris Canales

✓ Voted to let the contract expire

★ Reps. Limón and Canales voted for cancellation. Contact them to say thank you and ask them to keep pushing. Contact the other six to change their minds.

How to speak at City Council public comment

You have the right to speak. Here's how.

El Paso City Council meets most Tuesday mornings at City Hall, 300 N. Campbell. Any resident can speak during public comment — you do not need to be invited, you do not need to be an expert, and you do not need to give your address.

To sign up: Sign up by 9am the day of the meeting. Call the City Clerk at (915) 212-0049 or email [email protected]

You get 3 minutes. Stick to the facts. Be respectful. End with a clear ask: "I am asking this council to vote against renewing the Flock Safety contract."

Need Spanish interpretation? Email [email protected] by noon the Friday before the meeting to request it at no cost.

Pro tip: Print and bring copies of our facts page to hand to council members and staff. A physical document in someone's hand is harder to ignore than a website.

What to say in 3 minutes

State your name and district. Say you oppose the Flock renewal and want it canceled. Give one or two specific facts — the Android 8.1 operating system that can never be patched, the Harris County data access question, the $7.5 billion valuation built on resident data. End with your ask. Sit down. One person speaking clearly and calmly does more than ten people shouting.

Share this site

The most powerful thing you can do after contacting your representative is tell someone else. Share this site. Tell your neighbors. Post it in your neighborhood group. The contract expires May 16 — time is short.

Share the site

deflockelpaso.org

Send it to anyone who drives in El Paso. That's everyone. Every person who drives past a Flock camera is in this.

Use the line

"El Paso residents are the product."

Post it. Say it. Put it in your neighborhood group. It's true, it's documented, and it's hard to argue with.

Get involved

Contact