Texas DOT
to Install Federally Funded Highway Speed Cameras
Despite the opposition of the state legislature, the Texas
Department of Transportation proposes a federally funded speed
camera test.
June 11, 2007
theNewspaper.com
Despite the
near-unanimous opposition in the state legislature to the use of
speed cameras, the Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT) is
moving forward on a proposal to deploy photo radar on state
highways using federal gas tax funds. Legislation awaiting
Governor Rick Perry's signature prohibited only municipalities
-- like Marble Falls and Rhome -- from installing automated
speeding ticket systems. It was silent on the possibility of a
state-run system (read
legislation).
TxDOT began searching in April for a vendor that, using federal
funds, would allow the agency "to assess and evaluate all
elements of an automated speed notification system." Once
selected, the vendor would operate an average time speed camera
test for at least six months on Interstate 10 near El Paso and
State Highway 6 near College Station.
Time-distance ticketing systems use multiple cameras spaced far
apart on a freeway. Each car is photographed once as it enters
the first section of road. Miles later a second photograph is
taken that allows the vehicle's average speed to be calculated
from the time it took to travel between the two locations. In
use in Britain under the trade name SPECS, these cameras are
commonly referred to as "yellow vultures" and are among the most
lucrative in the country.
In its request for proposals, TxDOT cited success of speed
cameras in the UK and Washington, DC. The UK government
generated £120 million (US $240 million) in revenue in 2003
while the Washington, DC red light and speed camera program has
issued $217 million in tickets since 1999. TxDOT's vendor will
send notices -- warnings at first -- to motorists driving just 5
MPH over the limit with an accuracy level of +/- 2 MPH, meaning
those driving just 3 MPH over the limit could receive a
photograph and letter in the mail.
The River Cities Daily Tribune, which
first reported the story last week, noted that TxDOT also
ordered Marble Falls to remove its speed camera van from state
highways in April citing safety concerns.
"How hypocritical is that?" Marble Falls Mayor Raymond Whitman
told the Daily Tribune. "I have a bit of a problem with it, not
because they're using the camera, but because if it's unsafe for
us to use, how can it be safe for the state to do it?"
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