Not wanting to point fingers (and I often point at myself with a slap to the forehead) I think many of us ask questions which on later reflection should have been obvious.
In the OP's original post/question they may have been thinking that going digital means encryption. Well this have already been discussed and answered above.
The "slap the forehead moment" is do we ever step back for a moment ask ourselves do we want our supposedly HTPPS/encrypted transactions to readily decrypted so people can see our financials etc."
One often needs to turn the compass needle at yourself and ask the question. If you do that then you have answered your own question.
A few years ago I posted on a very heated thread regarding encryption. There were very passionate people that didn't see the need for encryption on public safety radio systems, and were willing to fight to the death over it.
I asked a very simple set of questions:
Please share the following info:
Full legal name.
Full address
drivers license number
Physical description, including height, weight, color of eyes and hair, gender.
make, model, color and VIN number for your vehicle
License plate number from your vehicle
All wants/warrants/convictions/criminal history
Gun ownership
As you can expect, none of the people that were so adamant that encryption should be outlawed were willing to share any of that information.
Yet, they expected to be allowed to hear it over the radio any time they felt like it, all in the name of entertainment.
That said asking is decryption of anything is possible then "nothing is impossible" but the earth may freeze over before that happens.
Also I'm reading / hearing that there are growing concerns about Quantum and Neural computers being able to radically reduce the time to crack any given encryption. This could be a concern for "static" data.
When Amazon sells quantum computers, I'll worry. Until then, the people that can afford those sorts of toys are going to be doing better stuff with them, like curing diseases and modeling the entire known universe.
However for encrypted data/transmissions then unless they are recorded they are just disturbances in the ether and useful real time decryption is never going to happen unless you can find the encryption/decryption key.
If a simple car remote can/do use hopping codes to counter interception than I strongly suspect that radios that use encryption do even more anti attack methods of not using the same key all the time.
Any agency that isn't frequently changing keys will hopefully be addressing that by then. Daily key refresh will help reduce risk. The technology exists to do that, but agencies get lazy.
As for the rest of it, scanner listeners often don't realize that there are existing requirements on the books to keep criminal justice information and personal identifying information secure at all times and in all methods of transport. Doesn't matter what it is. Encryption of radio traffic where this sort of information is shared is required by the FBI and many states, and has been for a very long time.
Suggestions that officers should constantly be switching channels between encrypted and clear solely for the benefit of a scanner listeners entertainment are not realistic.
As for overseeing the law enforcement agencies, it's pure naivety to think that the only sneaky stuff that happens in public safety happens over the radio. Anything like that happening is much wider spread and will require much more than a few scanner hobbyists to catch it.