The key is having the right timing on the yellow phase - based on speed limit - 
so cameras do
not become an unintended cash cow.

Mike


***********************************

On 3 Feb 2008 at 7:57, Nelson, Larry wrote:

Originally, I thought red-light running was just entering the intersection on a 
stale yellow.
Over the last three months, I have seen several vehicles enter Madison 
intersections when
the light was well into its red cycle time. That is scary!



From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] on behalf of Steve Drake
Sent: Sun 2/3/2008 6:31
To: [email protected]
Subject: [Bikies] Focus of red-light cameras is safety, not cash, suburbs say
It looks like many of Chicago´s suburbs are following the city´s lead and 
getting red light
cameras. Chicago reported that side-impact crashes were down 23% on the first 10
intersections to get the devices.

_______________________________________________________________

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/chi-redlights_bdfeb03,1,4997056.story

Focus of red-light cameras is safety, not cash, suburbs say

By John Keilman

Tribune reporter

February 3, 2008


Hundreds of red-light cameras are due to spring up across suburban Chicago in 
coming
months, turning much of the region's road system into a web that could snare 
hordes of
careless, defiant or unlucky motorists.

Some experts believe the increasingly pervasive technology has the potential to 
alter driving
behavior on an epic scale, creating a "halo effect" where motorists respect red 
lights even
when cameras aren't present. Skeptics say the biggest beneficiaries are likely 
to be local
governments, their coffers swollen by rivers of $100 tickets.

Yet even as a backlash against the devices spreads across the nation, at least 
59 Chicago
suburbs have signed up for photo enforcement. With some vendors offering the 
cameras at
no upfront cost, putting them up can be a decision so easy it practically makes 
itself.

"The goal is to cut down on accidents," said Mayor Ronald Serpico of Melrose 
Park, which
installed cameras at two North Avenue intersections. "If you can accomplish 
that and make
some money along the way, that's fine."

Some money, though, can mean a lot of money: Chicago, the state's pioneer in 
red-light
cameras, expects to make $52.3 million in revenue from the devices this year, a 
near-tripling
of the $19.8 million collected in 2006.

Cops make decisions
Red-light cameras capture still photos and video of vehicles that enter 
intersections after the
signal changes. Companies that operate the systems screen the footage and call 
apparent
violations to the attention of local police, who decide whether to ticket the 
owner of the car.
The driver isn't penalized under Illinois law.

Not every alleged violation is guaranteed to bring a fine. Waukegan police 
Chief William
Biang said his department issues tickets in just over half of the cases it 
reviews.

"We're making sure they're serious violations," he said.

The cameras came to the area in 2003, when Chicago installed them at a 
high-accident
intersection. The number in the city has since risen to 69, and another 40 
could be added this
year.

While revenues have soared with the increase, city officials say the devices 
have also cut
down on crashes. Side-impact wrecks at the first 10 intersections to receive 
cameras
decreased 23 percent, said Tony Ruiz, executive director of the city's Office 
of Emergency
Management and Communications.

"It's all about safety for me," he said. "[The cameras] are very effective."

But Richard Diamond, whose opposition to the devices goes back to his days as a
transportation specialist for former U.S. House Majority Leader Dick Armey 
(R-Texas), said
safety claims are overblown. He noted that several researchers have found that 
the cameras
increase rear-impact crashes because motorists slam on their brakes to avoid 
getting a
ticket.

Fewer 'T-bone' crashes
The Federal Highway Administration reached that conclusion in a 2005 study, but 
it also
found that side-impact crashes went down. Spokesman Doug Hecox said the 
trade-off is
worth it.

"[Rear impact] crashes are more survivable," he said. "In a T-bone crash, all 
you've got
between you and the other car is a door. With a rear end crash, you've got more 
material to
protect you."

Richard Retting, senior transportation engineer at the Insurance Institute for 
Highway Safety,
said red-light cameras can have lasting effects on drivers' conduct. He cited 
studies showing
that violations declined not only where the devices were mounted, but at 
camera-free
intersections nearby-the so-called halo effect.

Taking that finding to its logical conclusion, he said that as cameras blanket 
a region, "one
would expect the drivers' response to spill into communities that didn't use 
that technology."

The surge of local interest in red-light cameras is due partly to a 2006 state 
law that allowed
Chicago suburbs to put them up, partly to sales practices that make the devices 
easy to
afford.

Vendors often provide the cameras at no cost, making their money through 
equipment fees
(Aurora will pay $4,395 a month per intersection approach) and processing fees 
(RedSpeed
Illinois, a popular vendor, charges about $27 per ticket).

The towns keep the rest, and contracts usually guarantee they will never lose 
money on the
deal.

So far, there has been plenty of cash for everyone. At least five companies are 
competing in
Illinois, and one of them, Redflex Traffic Systems, earned $44 million in the 
U.S. last year.
The firm has predicted that photo enforcement will eventually be a $3 billion 
business.

As the companies profit, so do local governments. Cook County has projected $40 
million
annual revenue from the cameras, which it plans to begin installing within a 
year. Some
suburbs that recently mounted them, including Waukegan and Melrose Park, have 
already
issued hundreds of tickets.

With so much money at stake, political maneuvering has become inevitable. 
Rolling
Meadows Police Chief Steven Williams moved quickly to get camera coverage at one
intersection out of concern that Cook County-which maintains traffic signals in 
numerous
municipalities-might put up its own cameras elsewhere in the village.

While safety was his first priority, Williams said, "There's no question 
[cameras are] going to
bring in some money. That's the reality. Cook County is certainly not going to 
ignore that
reality. . . . They don't want any part of the enforcement, but they certainly 
want to look at it as
a revenue source."

County in planning stage
Rupert Graham Jr., superintendent of the county's Highway Department, said 
officials are
looking at intersections in municipalities and unincorporated areas alike, and 
have not
decided where they might put the devices.

The proliferation of red-light cameras has stirred a growing protest around the 
country, as
well as a countervailing industry: Companies hawk sprays that they claim make 
license
plates unreadable, and high-tech devices are available that alert drivers to 
the devices'
presence (Illinois law requires signs to announce cameras to approaching 
traffic).

The Minnesota Supreme Court barred the cameras last year, saying state law 
required the
driver, not the car owner, to be penalized. Iowa's high court is looking at a 
similar case, but
closer to home, photo enforcement has survived legal scrutiny: Last month, a 
federal judge
threw out a lawsuit that called Chicago's camera ordinance unconstitutional.

It doesn't take a court case to make a change, though. In November, Bolingbrook 
officials
shut off their red-light cameras, saying that with accidents down 40 percent in 
six months,
drivers had apparently learned their lesson.

The cameras also generated countless gripes, many of which were handled by 
Mayor Roger
Claar. He had little sympathy for the complainers, but then, turning right on 
red one day, he
got a ticket himself.

"I remembered the day I drove that intersection and I thought I stopped," he 
said. "Apparently
I was not thinking."

He said he paid the $100 fine without a grumble. It had no bearing, he said, on 
his decision to
suspend the program.

Copyright © 2008, Chicago Tribune


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