Somesville Intersection Camera Is Traffic Equipment, Not Surveillance. On Mount Desert Island, Officials Address Fears Over Traffic Camera.

Somesville Intersection Camera Is Traffic Equipment, Not Surveillance.

On Mount Desert Island, Officials Address Fears Over Traffic Camera.

Carrie Jones and Shaun Farrar

Apr 14, 2026

A traffic scene on a winding road with vehicles approaching a traffic light. The traffic signal indicates red lights, with a sign for left turn yield on green. Road construction cones are placed along the shoulder.
The Somesville intersection where several have spotted a camera mounted on a pole. Shaun Farrar photo.

The Bar Harbor Story is generously sponsored by Choco-Latté Café.

Exterior view of Choco-Latte Cafe located at 240 Main St., Bar Harbor, ME, featuring a bagel and a coffee with a heart design.

SOMESVILLE—A camera mounted on a pole at a major intersection in Somesville is likely just a camera from the Maine Department of Transportation used to control the cycling of the traffic lights, according to Bar Harbor and Mount Desert Police Chief David Kerns.

It is not a Flock camera, the type of camera which captures vehicle information as those vehicles move past the cameras without drivers necessarily being aware. This had concerned multiple island residents.

According to Chief Kerns, “There are no cameras in Somesville or at that intersection that are capable of license plate or facial recognition.”

Nor have any cameras for law enforcement purposes been installed in this location.

However, there are approximately 90,000 Flock cameras in use across the country. They are funded by federal grants.

A green traffic light signals go, with a road sign indicating 'ONLY' for straight traffic, set against a backdrop of trees and utility lines.
The small round camera at Somesville. Shaun Farrar photo.

According to an article by Elizabeth Walztoni of the Bangor Daily News, “In particular, monitoring cameras such as those made by Flock and Verkada have been controversial elsewhere in Maine because of concerns that they might be used to track people without cause, and that federal immigration officials may have access to the information they collect.

“The Hancock County project uses different reader cameras, from Motorola Solutions, that record license plate numbers; local law enforcement says its policies will prevent the information from being used for immigration enforcement.”

“It’s really a tool for law enforcement to make sure we’re doing all we can, just because we can’t be everywhere all at once,” Chief Kerns told Walztoni at the time.

She said that he described “it as an investigative resource rather than an effort to track or surveil residents.”

People who do not want the cameras in their communities—or other communities—have set up a website, Don’t Get Flocked, which details the cameras’ locations. It shows the Somesville camera on Mount Desert Island as well as another in Bangor.

Though that Somesville camera is not a Flock camera, there are reportedly Flock cameras in use on Mount Desert Island at undisclosed locations, but definitely not at that Somesville location.

Walztoni’s Bangor Daily News article says that “Bucksport is set to be one of the latest areas in the county joining a local network of police agencies that use such cameras, which are already online in Bar Harbor and Ellsworth.”

Map displaying ALPR camera locations in the northeastern United States and Canada, with data points shown in red circles, indicating various counts and information details.
Alleged Flock camera locations via Don’t Get Flocked.

Photos: Shaun Farrar/Bar Harbor Story.


LINKS TO LEARN MORE

More License Plate Reader Cameras Are Coming to Maine’s Coast

More License Plate Reader Cameras Are Coming to Maine’s Coast

Feb 10

Read full story


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