 Who says you can't have it all? Not Appalachian Wireless, we know what you want. Appalachian Wireless offers the hottest smartphones and unlimited data plans, all on the region's number one network. The Jenkins Police Department is the latest law enforcement agency in eastern Kentucky to adopt the use of body cameras. Police officers in Jenkins were issued body cameras Wednesday, and the devices hit the streets immediately. The cameras can be mounted in several different ways to an officer's body, and the footage they capture once activated can be stored and shared using a cloud-based service through body cam tech provider in transit. What the cameras do is really kind of building transparency, and so building transparently into how the police department works, also bringing information in for evidentiary purposes. And ultimately, you know, limiting liability. What we see are body and work camera platforms. Police complaints typically go down about 93 percent, and behavior changes on both sides. Grant funds provided the funding for the new cameras, which officials consider as an investment for the city rather than an expense. What most agencies are finding, there's actually a return on the investment, so you're looking at what the true cost is, you're actually saving money by implementing a body and work camera program. It wasn't a cost directly to the city, even if it had been a cost to the city. The cost that's offset that may be related to lawsuits and potential litigation down the road can be a benefit for us. A small department may not need cameras in some people's view, but we encounter the same problems, issues, and calls for service that state police, county, other cities, you never know what that call is going to be and what that call is going to be about. Like I said, ultimately, it's to keep the officer safe, to keep the public safe. Jenkins currently rosters three police officers. All three were issued body cameras. Reporting in Jenkins, Chris Anderson, EKB News.