Red-light Cameras Open Question: Safety Device or Backdoor Tax Increase?
By Maggie Clark, Staff Writer, Pew Charitable Trust's Stateline
'Three years ago, these red-light cameras were pitched as safety devices," said state Sen. Jeff Brandes, a St. Petersburg Republican who has proposed a state ban on the cameras. "Instead, they’ve been a backdoor tax increase."
A 2012 audit in St. Petersburg showed the number of dangerous side-impact collisions did decrease at intersections where the red-light cameras had been installed. However, rear-end collisions actually increased at those intersections, as more drivers stopped short to avoid violations.
In addition to identifying drivers who run through a red light, the cameras tag those who fail to come to a full and complete stop before turning right on red.
Communities in 24 states and the District of Columbia have at least one red-light camera, according to the Governors Highway Safety Association. The Insurance Institute of Highway Safety recently counted more than 500 communities with the cameras.
Overall, people like them: In a 2011 pollconducted by the insurance institute, two-thirds of drivers in 14 big cities with cameras expressed support for them. And last November, voters in Longview, Wash., and Pohatcong, NJ, rejected ballot measures to remove the cameras.Cameras that catch drivers who violate red-light laws are far more popular than cameras that catch speeders. Only eight states and the District of Columbia use speeding cameras, and a dozen states have enacted laws banning them.
Nevertheless, resistance to red-light cameras may be growing. Nine states already prohibit them, and lawmakers in Ohio are considering a ban, even though the cameras generated $16 million for Ohio cities last year.
Lawmakers in Iowa, New Jersey and Colorado also considered turning off the cameras this year, though those efforts fell short.
"The state shouldn’t be counting on people to violate laws in order to pad their budgets," Brandes said.
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