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📷 Privacy & Surveillance/License Plate Readers

License Plate Readers: Mountain View vs San Jose

How do license plate readers rules compare between Mountain View, CA and San Jose, CA?

Mountain View has fewer restrictions than San Jose.

Mountain View, CA

Santa Clara County

Some Restrictions

California Civil Code §1798.90 (SB-34) sets minimum privacy rules for automated license plate reader systems. The Santa Clara County Sheriff's Office posts an ALPR usage and retention policy and limits sharing of plate data with outside agencies.

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San Jose, CA

Santa Clara County

Heavy Restrictions

San Jose Police Department operates automated license plate readers under California Civil Code §1798.90 (SB-34) data security requirements and the city's Surveillance Technology Use Policy. SJPD must publish a use policy, retention schedule, and annual audit; misuse can trigger discipline and civil penalties.

View full San Jose rules →

Key Facts Comparison

FactMountain ViewSan Jose
StatuteCal. Civ. Code §1798.90.5-
Policy requiredPosted online, public-
Sanctuary limitNo ICE civil sharing-
Sheriff roleSCC Sheriff ALPR Policy-
DamagesAvailable under §1798.90.54-
State law-Civil Code §1798.90 (SB-34)
City layer-Surveillance Tech Use Policy
Sharing limit-No ICE per SB-54 (Values Act)
Public policy-Required, posted online
Civil remedy-Actual + exemplary damages

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Mountain View FAQ

Can my HOA install ALPR cameras at the entrance?

Yes, but the HOA must publish an SB-34-compliant usage and privacy policy, restrict access, set a retention period, and avoid sharing plate data with civil immigration authorities under the County sanctuary policy.

How long does the Sheriff keep ALPR data?

Per the Sheriff's published policy, non-hit ALPR records are retained for a limited period defined in the policy and then purged. Hits associated with active investigations are retained per the case-management retention schedule.

San Jose FAQ

Can SJPD share my plate data with federal immigration?

No. The California Values Act (SB-54) bars state and local agencies from sharing ALPR reads with federal immigration authorities for civil enforcement. SJPD's ALPR policy explicitly prohibits ICE access and is audited annually for compliance.

How long does SJPD keep ALPR reads?

SJPD's published policy sets a fixed retention period (commonly one year for non-investigatory data; longer if linked to an active case). Civil Code §1798.90.51 requires written justification for the retention period in the agency's posted ALPR policy.

Are private ALPRs (HOAs, businesses) regulated?

Yes. SB-34 also covers private operators of ALPR systems. They must protect data, post privacy policies, and face civil liability under Civil Code §1798.90.54 for breaches and misuse. HOAs sharing data with police should consult counsel on third-party-doctrine issues.

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