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Supporters of red light cameras say project should be low-cost(Austin TX)
590 KLBJ ^ | 07/26/2006 | 590 KLBJ

Posted on 07/26/2006 6:06:38 AM PDT by ziggy_dlo

Supporters of red light cameras say project should be low-cost

7/26/2006

Austin City Council members who support red light cameras say they want to find a system that won’t cost the city much money or effort. City Council Member Lee Leffingwell says the goal of a red light camera system would not be to boost the city’s revenues, but he also wants to avoid draining city funds for a network of cameras at busy intersections. “What I would be looking for in a proposal that comes back to us is one that has zero or minimal up-front costs to the city, and as much of the overhead and administrative process that can be done is actually handled by the company,” Leffingwell said.

Some other cities with red light cameras work out arrangements with the private company supplying the gear so that the company is paid based on the number of citations the red light cameras generate.

The Council could ask the City Manager on Thursday to draft a plan for installing red light cameras at busy intersections. But actually purchasing the cameras and ordering them to be installed would require a separate vote


TOPICS: Government; News/Current Events; US: Texas
KEYWORDS: austin; freedom; redlight
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To: horse_doc

How is that any different than any other type of appeal to any other crime? The original poster stated that the photos taken from red light cameras could not be appealed. I questioned that assertion and from what I have found, and from your post, that the photos can be appealed. If an individual does not wish to make an appeal, or cannot, that still doesn't negate the fact that an appeal can be made.


41 posted on 07/26/2006 10:04:38 AM PDT by ops33 (Retired USAF Senior Master Sergeant)
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To: elkfersupper

A "Journal of the Politics of Driving" is NOT an independent study. Every one I have seen that say that (like this one) are untrained people who have an axe to grind -- just like you.


42 posted on 07/26/2006 10:08:22 AM PDT by jim_trent
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To: palmer

Sounds like an idiot did the timing there. It reminds me of the saying "Don't attribute to malice what can be explained by incompetence." Setting up timing for a single intersection is a stretch for a lot of "engineers". Setting up several related (or interconnected ones) is a stretch for all but a few (just my opinion).


43 posted on 07/26/2006 10:12:35 AM PDT by jim_trent
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To: ops33
I am glad people are appealing. I have personally seen the cameras malfunction and I hope the law gets overturned. I understand the process for challenging the ticket, but it still comes down to you did it or you have to turn in who did. That is not a challenge of guilt or innocence because one of the two is going to be fined.

A friend of mine was given a ticket for going through the intersection I saw malfunction, and he new he was innocent, but he choose just to pay the speeding tax as opposed to fighting it. At $50 most people consider it more of a hassle to fight it then to just pay it.

The assumption is guilty and machines are considered infallible...
44 posted on 07/26/2006 10:17:01 AM PDT by jrestrepo
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To: jim_trent

Let me know where I can find those studies.


45 posted on 07/26/2006 10:17:18 AM PDT by Atlas Sneezed (Your FRiendly FReeper Patent Attorney)
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To: jim_trent
As far as the companies reducing the yellow-time, I have heard that charge by people who want to stop the cameras, but I have not seen that confirmed in an independent study.

Union City, CA had to refund over $1 million for reducing yellow light time 1.3 seconds below state law.

If you have time to kill you can read the Burkey-Obeng Red Light Camera Study here. Net result when including as many variables as possible is that RLCs do not reduce collisions.
46 posted on 07/26/2006 10:31:01 AM PDT by BJClinton (What happens on Free Republic, stays on Google.)
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To: jim_trent
A "Journal of the Politics of Driving" is NOT an independent study.

There are independent studies at the link.

I tried to link directly to the page, but they evidently want you to go through their home page first.

1/3 of the way down, on the right is a box called "Popular Studies". Click on "Red Light Camera Roundup". There are dozens of independent studies in PDF format.

Sheesh.

47 posted on 07/26/2006 11:54:34 AM PDT by elkfersupper
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To: BJClinton

My understanding of that case was that the yellow light time was set up according to accepted engineering standards (read the MUTCD for more information about the ITE formula). The politicians passed a law that was NOT based on anything other than what they felt like at the time. The two conflicted. That does not make the state law right.

I have read the Burkey-Obeng Red Light study and don't find it as "independent" as the people here claim. How many times have people around railed at studies by ivory-tower pin-heads that confirm their own prejudices. Unless it was done by an professional engineering group (like ASCE) and has been peer reviewed and accepted, I am not going to get too worked up about it.


48 posted on 07/26/2006 12:28:55 PM PDT by jim_trent
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To: Beelzebubba

> Let me know where I can find those studies.

Be glad to. Get an engineering degree. Join the engineering organizations in your field. Subscribe to their usual publications. Go to their seminars and conventions each year. Read the lastest studies, listen to the people doing the studies when they make their presentation, offer constructive criticism, see the updated studies in following years with the criticisms answered. When the study is accepted by your peers, it will be worked into standards that EVERYONE uses, like the MUTCD.

And no, I don't have a couple of webpages that you can glance at. Most of this information is available only to members until it is adopted.


49 posted on 07/26/2006 12:38:12 PM PDT by jim_trent
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To: elkfersupper

I looked through the "studies" and "commentary" listed on the website and still don't see any independent engineering studies there. Everyone there has their own axe to grind.

If it is NOT from a national engineering group (like the ASCE) and has been peer reviewed and accepted by the people actually working in the field, it is suspect. There may be some ivory-tower, pin-heads out there who are actually doing good work, but that has to be proved, not just accepted.


50 posted on 07/26/2006 12:43:11 PM PDT by jim_trent
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To: jim_trent
You may not understand red-light cameras, but they are no different.

With all due respect, one rather large difference is that the first traffic lights didn't automatically send you a bill in the mail.

And with all due respect to your profession, the goal of our society is not to pass the maximum number of vehicles through an intersection with the minimum number of accidents. The goal of our society is to preserve liberty, and property rights. Red light cameras are in conflict with that basic goal.
51 posted on 07/26/2006 12:58:54 PM PDT by horse_doc
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To: jim_trent

>>Be glad to. Get an engineering degree.

Got one.

>>Join the engineering organizations in your field. Subscribe to their usual publications. Go to their seminars and conventions each year. Read the lastest studies, listen to the people doing the studies when they make their presentation, offer constructive criticism, see the updated studies in following years with the criticisms answered. When the study is accepted by your peers, it will be worked into standards that EVERYONE uses, like the MUTCD.

Hump you, too. I guess you are just blowin' smoke. I am familiar with the MUTCD. I am just looking for the studies that find no benefit to lengthened yellows.

Here is one that shows a benefit:

"The study found that improving signal visibility reduced violations 25 percent. Other changes could net between 18 and 48 percent reductions. Yet they found when the yellow signal was 1 second shorter than the standard ITE timing formula specifies, red light violations jumped 110%. ***Extending the yellow an additional second yielded 53% reduction in violations, producing the greatest benefit of all the factors studied*** (2-6)."

http://www.motorists.org/issues/enforce/tti04.html
http://www.motorists.org/issues/enforce/studies/tti04.pdf


52 posted on 07/26/2006 1:43:26 PM PDT by Atlas Sneezed (Your FRiendly FReeper Patent Attorney)
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To: ziggy_dlo

Here's why your plate will soon have a chip in it.

http://www.phantomplate.com/photoblocker.html


53 posted on 07/26/2006 1:52:48 PM PDT by cowtowney
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To: ziggy_dlo

Jeff Ward is talking about this very thing on KLBJ.


54 posted on 07/26/2006 1:56:13 PM PDT by Tolkien ("It is dangerous to be right in matters on which the established authorities are wrong." ---Voltaire)
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To: jim_trent

In California, yellow-light times were shortened to maximize the number of tickets issued, and "Lockheed Martin IMS, which operated the San Diego system, regularly scouted intersections in some cities based on high traffic volume, not locations that were most accident-prone. Documents revealed that officials sought locations with steep gradients and short yellow-light times," reported the New York Times


55 posted on 07/26/2006 2:02:32 PM PDT by razorback-bert (Rush was a victim of profiling)
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To: jim_trent

Studies elsewhere ... made a striking finding: rear-end accidents have shot up at intersections with cameras. In 2002 a consultant's study in San Diego reported that the number of crashes at camera intersections had increased by 3 percent after the cameras were installed, almost all of it a result of a 37 percent increase in rear-endings. "This finding is not consistent with the program's overall objective of improving traffic safety," the report's authors concluded.



Similarly, in Virginia studies of traffic patterns in all seven VA cities using red light cameras showed an increase in injury accidents at intersections with cameras. Even more sympathetic studies show an increase in rear-end accidents, but argue that a smaller decrease in side-impact collisions justifies it. If as a result of their implementation, though, the number of ambulance visits to red light collisions in the jurisdiction actually increased, it becomes laughably difficult to justify cameras on public safety grounds.



http://gritsforbreakfast.blogspot.com/2006/01/texas-ag-should-say-no-to-red-light.html


56 posted on 07/26/2006 2:05:16 PM PDT by razorback-bert
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To: ziggy_dlo
And these companies would purposely make the delay from yellow light to red light shorter so they could catch more runners. They gat paid a percentage of each runner. I personally hate this idea and I believe it infringes on my freedom rights. Any opinions?

One of the council members couldn't even tell a reporter how many fatalities were caused by the situation they think they are going to fix.

A FReeper had a study that if they truly wanted to cut down on fatalities, extending the yellow light by a second or two or three helps a lot more.

Basically, because people get paranoid about getting tagged by a camera, they will be over-cautious, slam on their brakes, and cause somebody to rear-end them, when they should have went through the yellow as they were taught years ago if they were close enough that stopping would be dangerous to themselves or others.

Another FReeper had a thread that mentioned the instances of private companies and city partnerships turning this into revenue generation (making the delays shorter, etc.).

I don't like having law enforcement turned over to private companies, regardless of what it's aobut - those companies number one goal is not public safety, but revenue generation (insert joke about law enforcement becoming another means of revenue generation for many cities). Usually this is at odds with what a city or other such governmental body is chartered to do, as well as it could work against public safety in some cases.
57 posted on 07/26/2006 2:08:42 PM PDT by af_vet_rr
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To: ziggy_dlo

I've found driving has been getting too easy. I think they should make the length of the yellow random so it ups the challenge.


58 posted on 07/26/2006 2:09:31 PM PDT by CougarGA7 (There are no trophies for winning wars. Only consequences for losing them.)
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To: ziggy_dlo

I hate Orwellian big brother revenue enhancement programs like this.


59 posted on 07/26/2006 2:10:28 PM PDT by mysterio
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To: Hydroshock
They get around that by declaring it a breach of a civil ordance not a criminal offence. That is what they are doing here in TX.

It was done by our wonderful Republican legislature, deliberately to get around this exact issue - by making it a civil matter, it reduces the instances of being able to contest it, as well as not having to identify the person actually driving, and also opens the door for a private company to become involved in this area of law enforcement).

If it was criminal, they would have to verify who was driving. Instead, they can just mail the owner the fine.
60 posted on 07/26/2006 2:11:24 PM PDT by af_vet_rr
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