Dozens of citizens descended on the St. Maryโ€™s County Board of Commissioners meeting Tuesday night, demanding the county protect their constitutional rights and kill a proposal to photograph all homes.

The Commissioners called the public forum due to the high volume of complaints received after radio and news reports were released about the plan, which aims at upgrading the countyโ€™s Geographic Information System by verifying all known addresses.

St. Maryโ€™s County officials have already accepted a $437,000 grant to fund a first phase of the project. The grant funds are derived from fees attached to wireless telephone bills, and distributed by the state Emergency Numbers System Board. The work was scheduled to start April 15, but has been delayed by county officials in response to citizen complaints.

Concerned citizens began calling, mailing and emailing complaints in March, after the county issued a press release stating contractors with badges will be photographing all homes during the next 11 months in an effort to better global-positioning maps.

A stream of concerned citizens took the podium at the meeting and loudly complained the plan would be a violation of their constitutional protections against unlawful search and seizure.

โ€œWe cannot create laws or ordinances that overstep the Supreme Court of the United States,โ€ said Roy Fedders, after reading part of the U.S. Constitution. The crowd that filled the meeting room, hallway and nearby office applauded many times for speakers, including another gentleman who quoted the Maryland Constitution.

Bob Kelly, director of the Countyโ€™s Information Technology (IT) Department, give a presentation of the plan before residents were given the floor, and answered a few recurring questions that have been received from citizens.

Kellyโ€™s first pointed out that photographers will not be coming on the private property. The plan is to photograph the โ€œentry-wayโ€ of the addresses as an effort to provide visual confirmation for responding fire, police and medical personnel, Kelly said. The goal is not to catch zoning or building violations and photos will not be posted on the countyโ€™s Web site.

โ€œItโ€™s not how itโ€™s been portrayed by some,โ€ Commissioner Tom Mattingly said. โ€œItโ€™s not about peeping in peoples’ windows. Itโ€™s not about coming and seeing what structures have been put up.โ€

Mattingly is passionate about issued relating to fire and emergency services because he has a second career as a volunteer firefighter. Mattingly spoke of several recent incidents when emergency responders have literally gotten lost when trying to locate unmapped or incorrectly numbered addresses.

The application for the grant came from the countyโ€™s Department of Public Safety, but the data collected will be incorporated by the countyโ€™s (IT) Department.

โ€œWe have urged the county staff to seek out grants for a wide variety of services, but that doesnโ€™t mean weโ€™re going to award all of them,โ€ Commissioner Dan Raley told The Bay Net on Friday. โ€œIโ€™m not even sure this is going to go forward.โ€

Several residents also pointed out that this plan doesnโ€™t include mapping residences on private roads, which officials say is 40 percent of the problem. Several residents said it is clear a โ€œsecond phaseโ€ will have to be completed at taxpayer expense.

โ€œWeโ€™re going to weigh