The Department for Work and Pensions has gone shopping for covert cameras, live-streaming kit, and vehicle-based recording gear as it lines up a £2 million upgrade to watch fraud suspects in real time.
A newly published tender sets out plans for what it calls a "live surveillance strategy," built around discreet cameras fitted inside and outside vehicles, encrypted video feeds streamed back to staff, and onboard systems that keep recording even when the signal drops.
The system is meant to capture clear footage day or night, whatever the weather, and funnel it straight into a central evidence system where it can be stored, reviewed, and, if needed, used in investigations.
Officials also want a control app that lets investigators tap into encrypted live feeds, steer cameras and trigger recordings from their own devices, turning what used to be film-now-review-later work into something closer to a remote-controlled stakeout.
The contract, estimated at £2 million excluding VAT and potentially running for up to five years, is open to multiple suppliers, suggesting a mix-and-match approach rather than a single all-in-one system. The DWP is also asking for tools that can export footage onto portable media, including the humble USB stick, a detail that feels both practical and somewhat ominous.
The move comes as ministers expand the department's powers to pursue fraud, including new abilities to demand information from third parties during investigations. Civil liberties groups have, naturally, already taken aim at the growing use of covert monitoring in welfare enforcement, warning that filming people without their knowledge risks tipping into something more intrusive than the government admits.
As ever, the department talks up protecting public money and doing things properly. The tender leans hard on security and evidential standards, with plenty about audit trails and who gets to see the footage.
What used to be a paper-heavy system is picking up cameras, live feeds, and remote controls, giving investigators a way to watch things as they happen instead of stitching it together later. Whether that makes it smarter or just more intrusive is likely to depend on where you are standing when the cameras are pointed. ®
Source: The register