Police can’t be everywhere all at once, so it’s in evitable they will some help from automated enforcement
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When driving, there’s nothing quite as scary as being tailgated.
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Perhaps understandable if someone’s going slow in the left lane on Deerfoot Trail or another freeway-style thoroughfare — but even then, this is not an excuse.
Driving too close is always dangerous because it takes away the time and space needed to react to unexpected situations that could require someone to slow down or stop.
Even more enraging is being tailgated … in a playground zone. This has happened to me more often than I can remember.
What exactly was the tailgater expecting me to do? I certainly wasn’t going to go over the speed limit. I’d get out of the way if I could to let them pass — not that passing in a playground or school zone is legal anyway.
Wouldn’t it have been great, I’ve often thought, if there were a police officer present to witness this and give the tailgater a ticket?
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As the Alberta government continues its long crusade against certain kinds of photo radar, conventional traffic enforcement remains an option for police. Too bad they can’t be everywhere at once.
The government has already banned the practice on provincially operated highways and is set to extend this prohibition to major roads connected to them.
As part of earlier changes, the province outlawed the use of unmarked police vehicles for the purpose of automated enforcement. You’d have to try very hard to not see these vehicles now, as they’ve been emblazoned with fluorescent yellow decals bearing the words “Drive safe” in large lettering.
Authorities have also effectively eliminated so-called “fishing holes,” where traffic enforcement would be conducted with officers hidden out of drivers’ view just ahead of a speed zone change, or so something like this.
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If the point of traffic enforcement is meant to deter driver misbehaviour, then the presence of law enforcement should be bold and in your face, as opposed to being subtle and out of sight.
When police are sneaking around to catch unsuspecting speeders, one could easily make the argument that revenue generation has become more important than road safety.
On the point, the province is undoubtedly correct.
That being said, there still needs to be a way for cities to catch and punish speeders, tailgaters and other scofflaw drivers.
There are only so many police officers to go around, and it would be wasteful to post a police officer on every street corner for this purpose.
While traditional enforcement can be useful, photo enforcement is often more cost effective to deploy.
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It’s been more than four years since the province began temporarily preventing municipalities from upgrading or installing photo radar equipment. The ban has been extended until Dec. 1, 2024, while Alberta continues a review of automated traffic enforcement.
And since then, there have been continuing rumblings of further restrictions on the practice.
Whatever policy the province ends up settling on, municipalities must have the freedom to use speed cameras and red lights cameras where it makes sense to do so.
A 2012 review of multiple studies from around the world showing the use of automated traffic enforcement, when used properly, can reduce rates of speeding by as much as 65 per cent and auto crashes by as much as 50 per cent.
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Working in concert with cameras, fines must also be stiff enough to act as a deterrent.
(I do recognize that the way things are currently structured, financial penalties have a lesser impact on well-off law-breakers. Perhaps an income-linked category of fines could be considered.)
And if the province is really serious about preventing police services from using photo radar as a revenue source, it should provide the ultimate incentive and fund them properly, so they law enforcement agencies don’t feel obligated to turn radar guns into cash machines.
Police departments shouldn’t be punished for giving up revenue doing the right thing.
There is no excuse to run red lights, to drive over the speed limit or to break any other traffic rules.
Cities must continue to have access to a full suite of tools — in-person and automated — to keep roads safe.
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