Trending
MOST READ
Real-Life Embarassing Sex Stories

Real-Life Embarassing Sex Stories

Feature: Submitted by City Paper readers 2/13/2013
Camping Close to Home

Camping Close to Home

Sizzlin’ Summer: Eight places to sleep outdoors within a 90-minute drive from Baltimore By Van Smith 5/15/2013
Ain’t the Beer Cold

Ain’t the Beer Cold

Sizzlin’ Summer: The endless quest for baltimore’s coldest draft beer brought to you by the City Paper I-Team™ 5/15/2013
Did the correctional officer bill of rights enable corruption?

Did the correctional officer bill of rights enable corruption?

Mobtown Beat: Protections afforded accused COs gain spotlight in BGF scandal By Van Smith 5/8/2013
Outdoor Dining

Outdoor Dining

Sizzlin’ Summer: It’s more than just eating outside By Henry Hong 5/15/2013
Festivals and Extra-vals

Festivals and Extra-vals

Sizzlin’ Summer Calendar: Charles Village Festival, Baltimore Pride, Maryland State Fair, and more. 5/15/2013
Sizzlin’ Summer

Sizzlin’ Summer

Sizzlin’ Summer: Summer in Baltimore is a sensory explosion, from the scent of Old Bay-smothered steamed crabs and the taste of marshmallow-topped chocolate snoballs to the smell of Ocean City salt water mixed with sunscreen and the vision of fireflies. 5/15/2013
Murder Ink

Murder Ink

Murder Ink: Murders this Week: 3; Murders this Year: 72 By Edward Ericson Jr. 5/8/2013
Calendar
 
Baltimore Daily Deals powered by ReferLocal

Print Email

Mobtown Beat

Speed-Camera Program Under Review

Task force to evaluate city's camera enforcement systems

Prompted by burgeoning speed-camera revenue and potential backlash by citizens, Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake announced a “Task Force” to review and study the privatized “Automated Traffic Violation Enforcement System.”

The eight-member task force, with members from state, city, and county government, police, and private groups, “will evaluate the city’s automated red light and speed camera enforcement systems to assure that these programs continue to effectively promote traffic and pedestrian safety, especially near school zones,” the mayor said in a press release.

She cited a “recent citizen survey” in which city residents supposedly ranked “disobeying traffic laws” a more serious problem than “property crime, panhandling, and graffiti” (which somehow made the list separate from other property crime).

Speed-camera revenue has long exceeded estimates. In this year’s budget the cameras brought in about $13 million more than projected, while red-light and right-turn cameras reaped $4.5 million more than projected (“Speed Bump,” Mobtown Beat, June 27). New revenue numbers reported by The Sun last week indicate the speed-camera bonanza has continued as the city added cameras. It now has 83 speed cameras, eight of which are mobile, and 83 red-light cameras.

Problems with the system’s administration have been reported for years. In 2010 WBAL found thousands of speed camera citations “sworn and attested” to by a deceased police officer. Camera miscalibrations, lack of required warning signage, and other glitches have also plagued the system, according to a watchdog web site.

The task force will review “camera locations, citation accuracy rates, and program management and performance,” according to the press release, while also examining “data trends to ensure that the systems are designed to help reduce speeds and improve safety, and that enforcement is equitably distributed among resident and nonresident motorists.”

The task force members are Cedric Ward, director, Office of Traffic and Safety, Maryland State Highway Administration; Marshall “Toby” Goodwin, director of police, Baltimore City Public Schools; Ragina C. Averella, director of public affairs, AAA Mid-Atlantic; Milton Corbett, commander of traffic unit, Baltimore Police Department; Elena DiPietro, chief solicitor of opinions and legal advice, Baltimore City Law Department; Todd Lang, director of transportation, Baltimore Metropolitan Council; Tori Burns, board member, Ashburton Community Association; and Jamie Kendrick, deputy director for administration, Baltimore City Department of Transportation.

We welcome user discussion on our site, under the following guidelines:

To comment you must first create a profile and sign-in with a verified DISQUS account or social network ID. Sign up here.

Comments in violation of the rules will be denied, and repeat violators will be banned. Please help police the community by flagging offensive comments for our moderators to review. By posting a comment, you agree to our full terms and conditions. Click here to read terms and conditions.
comments powered by Disqus