I believe they have this in Europe as well. My TomTom GPS navigation system 
will tell you when you are approaching one (as a for-fee service) so that you 
will know to slow down. 

 

On Friday, June 01, 2007, at 01:37PM, "Paul Trusten, R.Ph." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
wrote:
>A number of Australian states have fashioned a whole new art of traffic ticket
>revenue. In New South Wales, the Australian Capital Territory(ACT), and
>Victoria, roads are equipped with speed cameras. The cameras are linked to
>radar, and vehicles exceeding the speed limit get their license plates
>photographed and their vehicle, anyway, charged with speeding violations.
>
>Quoting Michael Palumbo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>
>> Yes, except that all road signs would have to be paid for by the states,
>> not by federal highway tax dollars (if I understand the National Highway
>> System Designation Act of 1995 correctly).
>>
>> Reducing the speed limit would do nothing except allow more tickets to
>> be issued.  Here in Philadelphia, none of the roads have a higher speed
>> limit than 90 km/h (55 MPH), yet everyone drives at closer to 120 km/h,
>> and I've seen people blow past me at over 180.  The whole system is
>> rigged to issue more tickets.
>>
>> And people wonder why I take trains everywhere whenever possible. ;)
>>
>> -Mike
>>
>> Jason Darfus wrote:
>> > I'm starting to hear in the media talk of reducing the nationwide speed
>> > limit to 55 (or 60) mph again.
>> > Heads up -- wouldn't that be a perfect time to switch to metric speed
>> > limit signs?
>> >
>>
>>
>
>
>--
>Paul Trusten, R.Ph.
>Public Relations Director
>U.S. Metric Association, Inc.
>Phone (432)528-7724
>www.metric.org
>3609 Caldera Boulevard, Apartment 122
>Midland TX 79707-2872 USA
>mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>http://home.grandecom.net/~trusten
>
>
>
>

Reply via email to