Red
light runners in Berkeley should prepare
to smile as they illegally cross intersections
this June when the city implements its
new red light camera system.
The
technology has sparked disputes between
motorist rights groups and safety advocates
around the country, but in Berkeley,
the chief concern is over a contract
the city signed giving the camera manufacturer,
Transol USA, a cut of every traffic
ticket meted out.
At
its last meeting of 2003 the City Council
voted unanimously to install red light
cameras at the intersections of Adeline
Street and Martin Luther King Jr. Way,
University Avenue and Sixth Street and
University and Shattuck avenues. In
return for paying to install the cameras
and operate the system, Transol is to
receive $48 of every ticket collected.
Red light tickets cost offenders $321,
of which Berkeley, under its agreement
with Transol, would receive $161.
The
council vote came two weeks before a
state law went into effect prohibiting
future contracts that gave red light
camera manufacturers a portion of ticket
revenues.
Berkeley
couldn’t afford red light cameras
if it had to either buy or lease the
equipment and operate it, according
to a city report from City Manager Phil
Kamlarz.
State
lawmakers prohibited cities from signing
future deals giving camera manufacturers
a cut of ticket revenue out of concern
that the arrangement gave them both
financial incentive to ticket as many
motorists as possible. In California
two local governments which also gave
camera manufacturers a cut of ticket
revenues suspended operations after
findings that the cameras were untrustworthy
and unreliable.
San
Diego suspended its program on June
1, 2001 after a judge threw out 300
tickets on grounds that the manufacturer
Affiliated Computer Systems had failed
to maintain the cameras to the point
that the pictures were not admissible
as evidence. In April 2002, the city
and county of Sacramento suspended its
program also run by ACS for discrepancies
between the manual ACS prepared and
the actual functioning of the system.
Later an appellate panel of Sacramento
Superior Court threw out a red light
violation on grounds that ACS maintenance
logs failed to show that the cameras
functioned properly.
A
2002 state audit on red light cameras
warned local governments that giving
manufacturers a share of ticket revenue
might become an incentive for vendors
to maximize the number of citations
“and create a poor perception
of the red light camera program by the
public.” As of 2002, 20 local
governments in California employed red
light cameras.
“Most
of the vendors have switched over or
are in the process of going to a flat
fee to avoid the appearance of conflict,
“ said Judith Stone, President
of Advocates for Highway and Auto Safety,
a proponent of red light cameras.
With
the cameras nearly installed, city officials
say their system will be fair to motorists.
“We have clear and precise rules
for what constitutes a valid red light
violation and these are the rules which
every potential violation is filtered
through, and even then only a qualified
police officer makes the decision to
approve or reject a case,” wrote
Hamid Mostowfi, Berkeley’s supervising
transit engineer in an interview conducted
via e-mail.
Mostowfi
said that, unlike in San Diego where
the red light camera system was connected
through traffic signal controllers,
Berkeley’s camera system will
have no connection to the signal controller
and thus can’t affect signal operation.
Under
Berkeley’s system, Transol representatives
will review red light camera photos
and forward apparent violations to Berkeley
police for additional study.
Lt.
Bruce Agnew of the BPD said that three
police officers will be responsible
for reviewing the photos. Only cases
where pictures clearly identify the
driver’s face and the license
plate number will be admissible, he
said. Agnew added that anyone who receives
a ticket in the mail will be invited
to come to police headquarters to view
the series of still photos of the incident.
“They
can then make up their mind whether
it’s worth contesting,”
he said.
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