Current:Home > FinanceEyes on the road: Automated speed cameras get a fresh look as traffic deaths mount -Ascend Wealth Education
Eyes on the road: Automated speed cameras get a fresh look as traffic deaths mount
Johnathan Walker View
Date:2025-04-06 22:20:07
RICHMOND, Va. — The speed limit in front of Linwood Holton Elementary School is 25 miles per hour at drop-off and dismissal.
But Tara FitzPatrick says it's not unusual to see drivers doing twice that. And she has the receipts to prove it.
"So he officially hit the school zone doing 50 miles an hour through a crosswalk," FitzPatrick says, pointing her radar gun at a gray Chevrolet SUV flying by in the left lane.
This is one of two schools in Richmond where the city has installed new enforcement cameras to catch speeders. FitzPatrick has two children at the school. She's also a traffic safety advocate for the nonprofit Greater Richmond Fit4Kids, which is why she owns a radar gun.
Still, FitzPatrick has mixed feelings about the speed cameras. She'd rather see the whole street redesigned to discourage speeding and protect pedestrians and bicyclists. But she also knows that won't happen anytime soon.
"A lot of us feel desperate" to make streets safer, FitzPatrick said. "If I could make a quick fix tomorrow, it would not be any type of speed enforcement. It would not be school zone speed enforcement cameras. But that's the option that we're left with at this point."
Advocates say speeding tickets change behavior
Richmond joins a growing list of cities turning to speed cameras. New laws in California and Pennsylvania will allow them in major cities where they've long been blocked.
Traffic fatalities have risen sharply over the past decade, and safety advocates around the country are desperately searching for anything that will get drivers to slow down. But critics say speed cameras can be a financial burden on those who are least able to pay.
Still, they've earned the endorsement of prominent safety advocates, including Jonathan Adkins, the CEO of the Governors Highway Safety Association.
"Automated enforcement works," Adkins said. "For lack of a better term, it sucks to get a ticket. It changes your behavior."
Police departments in many places have scaled back their traffic enforcement, Adkins says, and speeding and reckless driving seem to be getting worse. He says automated cameras can help fill that void.
"The question is, how do we deploy them in a fair and equitable way with the public support?" Adkins said. "It can't be a gotcha, it can't be a surprise."
Skeptics say speed cameras are a cash grab
No one likes getting a speeding ticket. But the objections to automated traffic enforcement go deeper than that.
"We are very skeptical that safety is the real goal," says Jay Beeber, with the National Motorists Association, a driver advocacy group.
There are other ways to get drivers to slow down, Beeber argues, including speed feedback signs that show drivers how fast they're going in real time.
"There's many ways to get greater compliance," Beeber says. But many cities are focused on speeding cameras, "because they do not want to lose the money from the tickets they are issuing."
Safety advocates have touted automated enforcement as a neutral alternative to police stops, which can be potentially biased by race, and as a way to reduce unnecessary interactions between police and communities of color.
But in practice, that hasn't always been the case. Studies in Washington, D.C., and Chicago show that tickets from automated enforcement are paid disproportionately by people of color.
"Automated enforcement has become a significant revenue driver for the city," said Olatunji Oboi Reed, who runs a nonprofit in Chicago called Equiticity. "And it's financially harmful to Black and brown people."
For decades, Reed says, Chicago has failed to fix some of the most dangerous intersections, or to redesign roads to discourage speeding and encourage biking or public transportation.
"The only solution we get is automated enforcement," Reed says. "That's not a failure of Black people who speed and run red lights. That's a failure of the transportation sector in Chicago."
New laws expand the reach of cameras
Speed camera advocates insist they've learned from those mistakes.
"We need to make sure that our cities have all the tools that are effective that they need to stop the carnage," said Laura Friedman, a state assemblywoman in California who sponsored the state law authorizing automated cameras as part of a pilot program in six cities across the state.
Friedman, who was formerly the mayor of Glendale, Calif., says local communities will be involved in choosing locations for those cameras.
"We make sure it can't be a money grab, because the money can only be used for physical speed-lowering improvements on the same streets where you're using the cameras," she said. "So it's really about changing the culture and slowing traffic down."
Speed cameras have been in use for over a decade in New York City, and safety advocates there say they've worked.
"This is really a model to other cities about how automated enforcement can roll out equitably," said Danny Harris, the executive director of the nonprofit Transportation Alternatives, "because of the way it's rolled out across the city."
The cameras have succeeded in changing drivers' behavior, Harris argues, noting that drivers who get a first ticket are 60% less likely to get a second one.
"It should be very easy," Harris says. "If you don't want a ticket, don't speed."
veryGood! (42321)
Related
- The White House is cracking down on overdraft fees
- My Big Fat Fabulous Life Star Whitney Way Thore Reveals the Cruel Insults That Led to Panic Attacks
- Reviving Hollywood glamor of the silent movie era, experts piece together a century-old pipe organ
- Jaron Ennis defeats David Avanesyan by TKO: Round-by-round fight analysis
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Triathlon
- Trump rally shooting raises concerns of political violence. Here's a look at past attacks on U.S. presidents and candidates.
- Facebook and Instagram roll back restrictions on Trump ahead of GOP convention
- Angel Reese's double-double streak snapped in Sky's loss to Liberty
- Will the 'Yellowstone' finale be the last episode? What we know about Season 6, spinoffs
- Map shows states where COVID levels are high or very high as summer wave spreads
Ranking
- 'Survivor' 47 finale, part one recap: 2 players were sent home. Who's left in the game?
- Shooting kills 3 people including a young child in a car on an Alabama street
- Fitness pioneer Richard Simmons dies 1 day after 76th birthday
- Richard Simmons Shared Moving Birthday Message One Day Before His Death
- Bill Belichick's salary at North Carolina: School releases football coach's contract details
- Princess Kate Middleton to attend Wimbledon final in rare public appearance: Reports
- Trump rally shooter killed by Secret Service sniper, officials say
- How a Holocaust survivor and an Illinois teen struck up an unlikely friendship
Recommendation
Angelina Jolie nearly fainted making Maria Callas movie: 'My body wasn’t strong enough'
Delta Air Lines adopts new rules for flight attendant uniforms after Palestinian pin flap
Melania Trump releases statement after Trump assassination attempt: A monster ... attempted to ring out Donald's passion
Amazon Prime Day deals are almost here. Should you take advantage of them?
IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
Barbora Krejčíková survives fierce comeback attempt to win 2024 Wimbledon championship
Barbora Krejcikova wins Wimbledon for her second Grand Slam trophy by beating Jasmine Paolini
Stop & Shop will be closing 32 'underperforming' stores in 5 New England states