State sacrifices safety for traffic fines

Many U.S. local governments are installing red-light cameras in busy intersections. Proponents of these cameras argue that they make streets safer. However, according to the New Republic's Gregg Easterbrook, red-light cameras are being used primarily to generate revenue, even when they cause unsafe traffic conditions.

For example, in Montgomery Country, Maryland:

  • Local officials retimed the yellow light from four-seconds to two-seconds to get more drivers to run red lights.

  • This generated additional revenue, but made traffic less safe as more people accidentally ran red lights.

    Similarly, in Washington, D.C.:

  • The company that operates the cameras in the District of Columbia gets a bonus when tickets exceed a quota.

  • If the real goal was to reduce red-light running, the District would be happy when the number of tickets declined, because that would mean fewer violations.

  • Instead the programme is structured to increase the number of tickets issued, because the real goal is securing money.

    Moreover, what are the legal implications of red-light cameras, asks Easterbrook? Under other laws, the state has to prove that a person committed a crime. However, with red-light cameras, the driver is presumed guilty. This establishes a dangerous precedent – whenever machines say you do something illegal, you are assumed to be guilty.

    Source: Gregg Easterbrook, Lights, Camera, Action, The New Republic Online, February 28, 2005.

    For article: http://www.tnr.com/doc.mhtml?i=w050228&s=easterbrook022805

    For more on State and Local Regulations: http://www.ncpa.org/iss/sta/

    FMF Policy Bulletin/ 15 March 2005
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