Cameras need cost certainty
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Just two weeks ago, we told you to admit it. As much as you might
hate them, you have to agree that red-light cameras work. They deter
gunning the engine and racing through an intersection when the light
is really yellow because you might just get caught. On film. Breaking
the law.
We know you feel that way because we feel the same. Three hundred
plus dollars is a lot of money to pay for getting 30 seconds or a
minute faster down the road. So we hit the brakes and sit with
everyone else at the light. We sit there with you.
Well, just last week our hunch received some grand confirmation.
The Orange County Grand Jury found that cameras perched at
intersections -- there are four intersections in Costa Mesa with the
cameras, though two are in limbo because of lawsuits -- can decrease
the number of accidents.
The grand jury also found, however, that there isn’t a good
accounting system at the Orange County Superior Court to determine
which tickets are issued via the cameras and which are handed out by
officers on the streets. And that means there’s no reliable way to
figure out how much money cities are getting, or losing, from using
the cameras, which cost $6,000 or so a month.
Now, everyone agrees that the cameras are not meant to be a
moneymaking venture. But, especially in these tough economic times,
dollars just can’t be thrown at a problem with no checks or balances.
Cities simply must be able to figure out if they’re recouping their
costs, and it is up to the Superior Court to figure out a way -- and
surely distinguishing between tickets linked to cameras and those
written face-to-face cannot be hard -- to provide this crucial piece
of missing information.
Once that information is in cities’ hands, it may show that more
of the cameras are feasible. And, judging by the grand jury’s report,
that should make our streets a little bit safer.
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