cross-posted from: https://sh.itjust.works/post/45991302

Ford calls speed cameras “nothing but a tax grab.” As do many reckless drivers. But surely he knows that speeding fines are not taxes. Even if they were, they’re voluntary: If you don’t want a speeding ticket, don’t speed.

In Ottawa, compliance with speed limits rose from from 16 per cent before speed cameras to 57 per cent after only three months, and to more than 80 per cent after three years. Instances of speeding at more than 15 km/h above the posted limit dropped from 14 per cent, pre-speed cameras, to less than one per cent after three years of the city using them.

A survey of more than 1,000 Ottawa residents, meanwhile, determined that of the 35 per cent of respondents who had been dinged with an speed camera fine, 69 per cent said it changed their driving behaviour. That’s what we want from these cameras.

And of course:

A study conducted by SickKids hospital in Toronto and published in July in the British Medical Journal’s Injury Prevention journal found that the use of speed cameras in school zones led to a 45 per cent reduction in speeding motorists, while the 85th percentile speed — the speed at or below which 85 per cent of the drivers travelled — dropped by almost 11 km/h. “The observed reduction in speed is likely important in reducing collisions and injuries,” the study noted

  • CannonFodder@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    There are reports of tickets for 2km/h over. penalties start at 1km/h over.
    Whatever - you do you. I’ll stick to the smaller roads away from the cameras. No risk to me then.

    • Victor Villas@lemmy.ca
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      20 hours ago

      Cameras here don’t work that way. The usual implementation is that nothing within 10% of the speed limit generates a ticket - most often even higher, because the sensor doesn’t have that accuracy, so you’re making your life harder for no reason

      • CannonFodder@lemmy.world
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        6 hours ago

        10% of 30km/h is 3km/h. So by your metrics if you’re 3km/h over you can get a fine. And if it’s accuracy is so bad, then it might give you a ticket for 31km/h even if it’s threshold is set to 10%

        • Victor Villas@lemmy.ca
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          18 minutes ago

          10% of the speed limit generates a ticket - most often even higher

          In practice, it usually means near or above 10 km/h beyond the speed limit, because the accuracy isn’t high enough to give tickets for 1 to 3 km/h differences. Those would be easily disputed and annulled in the courts.