When your church campus has cameras, how long do you keep the footage for?
In the era of VHS tapes, there was only so much physical storage space. Churches and organizations would keep a library of tapes for thirty days, then record over them. The loop was short because the storage shelf was small. Today, however, with the cloud, thumb drives, and other technologies, the cost of storage has plummeted. According to risk management leader Bob Wild from Brotherhood, churches should attempt to keep the footage forever.
The End of the Storage Excuse
The primary objection to long-term retention is usually cost. People assume that archiving years of Sunday morning video feeds requires a lot of space, money, and effort.
However, digital storage has become one of the cheapest commodities in the technology sector. Whether you use physical hard drives or cloud-based archiving, you can keep your footage and data relatively inexpensively.
The “Time-Delay” Factor of Abuse
Why should churches keep footage forever?
Sexual abuse typically has a big delay between when it happened to when it was reported. Children who are victimized today may not fully understand what happened until they are adults. They may be too scared or ashamed to speak up for decades. Victims frequently wait ten, twenty, or even thirty years before coming forward with their stories.
If an organization deletes its footage every thirty days, they are destroying the only objective evidence that exists. If a victim comes forward in 2045 to report an incident from 2025, a deleted hard drive leaves the church in a “he said, she said” situation. If the footage exists, the church has a witness.
The “Silent Witness” Defense
Bob Wild gives an example about if a former student were to accuse a youth pastor of inappropriate conduct twenty years ago. They claim that every Sunday after the service, the pastor would take them into a private office and close the door.
If you have the footage archived, you can go back to those specific dates. You can watch the hallway feed. If something happened, you can help the victim get evidence and justice.
Bob Wild notes that cameras allow you to verify subtle behaviors as well. An accusation might involve a leader constantly leaning over a student inappropriately at a craft table. With high-definition archives, you can review the footage to see if that physical boundary crossing actually occurred.
Solving vs. Preventing
While visible cameras have a small deterrent effect, their primary value is not just preventing problems, but resolving them.
Cameras are there to provide truth when needed. By keeping storage forever, organizations can make sure that the truth stays protected.
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