Cameras catch 4,000
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Deepa Bharath
More than 4,000 drivers have been caught on camera running red lights
at four of the city’s busiest intersections.
The cameras were first installed at Harbor Boulevard and Adams
Avenue in May. In October, more were installed at Bristol Street and
Anton Boulevard and along Newport Boulevard at 17th and 19th streets.
“We’re producing more red light citations than any other city in
the country which is being serviced by this company,” Lt. Karl
Schuler said. “That means this is a big problem for us.”
Most of the money from the hefty $326 fine per ticket goes to the
state and county, he said. In the end, the city gets about $42, money
City Council members have earmarked for the driver’s education
programs in local high schools.
In the next several months, the city will have these cameras at
six more city intersections.
“This is not meant to be a money-making operation for the city,”
Schuler said. “Red-light runners cause the most injury collisions,
and numbers show that these cameras, over a two-year period, will
bring down red light-related accidents by 40%.”
Intersections with these cameras post alerts to drivers as
mandated by the law. The cameras snap 30 frames a second when a
violation occurs. It then sends the digital images to a roadside
computer that stores them and sends them to a processing center in
Rhode Island.
The company screens the images and sends “legitimate” violations
back to the Costa Mesa police. Traffic department officers then look
at these violations and approve the citations. The tickets are then
mailed off to the violators with five pictures, including those of
the driver’s face and vehicle license plates.
Those who believe they did not run a red light are welcome to view
the tape at the police department, Schuler said. The department has
about 30 such viewings or hearings per week, he said.
“It saves us having to go to court,” Schuler said.
He said violators come up with wild excuses to avoid the steep
fines.
“I once had a lady who came in and said she delivers flowers and
couldn’t see the light change because she had bees in the car,”
Schuler said. “But we saw the tape together, and there were no bees.”
It makes the issue straight and simple and easy for the officers
to handle, he said.
“There is no dispute here,” Schuler said. “These are very obvious
violations.”
He said the city has not had one traffic collision to date that
could be attributed to drivers’ losing their concentration because of
a camera flash or stopping and being rear-ended.
Councilwoman Libby Cowan said she is “amazed at how effective the
cameras are.”
“I’m curious to see how other intersections are affected because
of the cameras,” she said. “Are people slowing down, or are they
taking advantage of the fact that there are no cameras?”
The council expects to get numbers from the police department in
January, Cowan said.
“I think we’re sending a message to the people,” she said. “This
is the only way to stop red- light runners, because the police can’t
be at every intersection.”
* DEEPA BHARATH covers public safety and courts. She may be
reached at (949) 574-4226 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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