CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, JANUARY 27, 2015, OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, JANUARY 27, 2015, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“RED LIGHT CAMERA PLAGUE ABATING A
BIT”
For many California drivers, there
have been few worse plagues than the red light cameras that once operated in
more than 70 cities across the state.
At their peak, red light cameras
featured tickets costing upwards of $450 for “offenses” like stopping for a red
light, but with the front bumper a foot over a painted restraining line, or
stopping before making a right turn, but having the camera “see” it as not a
stop. Judges never allowed cross-examination of camera operators to be certain
their machines were not running faster than life speed.
But things are getting steadily more
sane on the red light camera front, where only about 50 California cities still
run such systems, operated by outfits like Redflex Traffic Systems and American
Traffic Solutions, both based in Arizona.
Over the last few years, more than 40
cities around this state have given up on photo-tickets, from Belmont and
Cupertino in the San Francisco Bay Area to Los Angeles and Poway in Southern
California, plus Fresno in the Central Valley. Also, voters in Anaheim,
Murietta and Newport Beach all nixed red light cameras when the question
appeared on their ballots. Results were the same from votes in 24 other cities.
There may be few law enforcement tactics more widely detested than red light
cameras.
But cities like Beverly Hills, San
Francisco and Culver City still have them.
Now the crucial, related issue of how
long yellow lights should stay on has been resolved in favor of motorists.
Relatively short yellow- or
amber-light intervals at intersections can amount to traps for unsuspecting
drivers if they are traveling too fast to stop when a light turns yellow, but
not so fast they can make it across the intersection before the light goes red.
For many years, yellow lights have
been set to correspond with speed limits, but prevailing traffic speeds in many
places are higher than the posted limits.
So Caltrans, spurred in part by
legislation introduced last year by Democratic state Assemblyman Adrin
Nazarian, from the San Fernando Valley area of Los Angeles, has changed the
rules, demanding that from now on all yellows must be set according to the
prevailing speeds of traffic, not the speed limits.
This may amount to a change of less
than half a second, but it’s enough to make an enormous difference in the
number of tickets issued. For example, reported the Safer Streets Los Angeles
organization, when the city of West Hollywood increased its yellow-light
interval by just three-tenths of a second, violations at its red light cameras
dropped by at least 40 percent. In Fremont, Safer Streets said, when Caltrans
increased yellow signal time by seven-tenths of a second, violations fell by 76
percent. A full second more yellow time in Loma Linda brought a 92 percent
reduction in tickets.
There are also the questions of
whether red light cameras make streets safer or even make much money for the
cities than authorize them. In Oakland last year, city officials claimed to
have netted just $280,000, while Redflex said the city got just over $1
million. Either way, the take was so paltry, Oakland doesn’t bother anymore.
As for safety, there are claims –
never substantiated – that because red light cameras can inspire to drivers to
slam on their brakes while traveling at fairly high speed, they lead to more
rear-end collisions. Longer yellows should reduce that danger as well as the
peril of getting a ticket that can cost well over $500, when all expenses are
done.
None of this, of course, speaks to the
serious constitutional issue of whether any legal proceeding can be valid when
defendants can’t cross-examine the people responsible for maintaining the red
light cameras.
The bottom line: All signs point to
the eventual expulsion of red light cameras from this state. They’ve been
demonstrably unfair for years, which has led to their phenomenal unpopularity.
Add that to the questions about reliability and increased safety, and you have
a program that probably won’t last many more years.
-30-
Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His
book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and
the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It," is now available in a soft cover
fourth edition. For more Elias columns, go to www.californiafocus.net
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