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Court Ruling Seen As Victory
for Safety
Misleading CBS Report Minimizes Seriousness
of Red Light Running Problem
WASHINGTON, D.C. (June 12, 2003) – In a resounding
victory for traffic safety, the Superior Court of the District of
Columbia today held the district’s automated enforcement program
to be constitutional and not in violation of any due process rights.
In doing so, Judge Melvin R. Wright also denied an attempt by plaintiffs
to turn the lawsuit into a class action on behalf of automobile
owners.
In dismissing the case entitled Agomo, et.al. vs.
District of Columbia, Judge Wright stated “the plaintiffs
argue, without legal support, that the District of Columbia is using
the camera system to achieve a financial windfall for the Government.
Nothing could be further from the truth. The fact that there are
a high number of persons photographed running traffic signals or
operating at excessive speeds is an example of the magnitude of
the problem facing city officials trying to correct a growing situation.”
Ironically, this decision comes on the same day as
a CBS Evening News story tried to portray photo enforcement as a
purely money making device for localities. While barely acknowledging
the proven traffic safety benefits of this technology, CBS also
mislead viewers when they honed in on signal light timing decisions
and eluded to revenue generation as the justification for the deployment
of this technology.
The segment cited a Montgomery County photo-enforced
traffic signal with a yellow-phase timed at three seconds that they
claim tricks motorists into running the light. Unfortunately the
story failed to report that according to the Institute of Transportation
Engineers (ITE) charts, the appropriate timing for a 25 m.p.h. approach
with a zero grade slope is only 2.8 seconds. More than 70 communities
across the nation have implemented photo enforcement programs. These
communities should not be hamstrung by frivolous allegations such
as those made by CBS.
Responding to the judge’s conclusion that the
Court found no support for the contention that the red light camera
and photo enforcement programs are unconstitutional, Kevin Morison,
director of corporate communications, Metropolitan Police Department
said “this is a good day for all motorists, pedestrians and
bicyclists who use the streets of our nation’s capital. Automated
systems provide consistent enforcement that is extremely effective
in deterring red light running and speeding.”
From August 1999, when red light cameras were first
introduced in Washington, D.C., through May 2003, red light running
violations have decreased 64 percent at the 39 intersections where
they are located. That translates into 24,000 fewer red light running
violations every month. Nationally, red light running caused as
many as 218,000 crashes last year resulting in more than 181,000
injuries and 880 deaths at a $14 billion cost to American taxpayers.
“The risk of citation focuses motorists on staying
within the limits, which translates into greater safety for everyone.
Safety is both the justification for and the result of photo enforcement
programs, said Leslie Blakey, Executive Director of the National
Campaign to Stop Red Light Running.
The National Campaign to Stop Red Light Running
is an industry-funded, independent advocacy initiative guided by
a national advisory board and focuses on both the national and grass
roots levels. The goal of the Campaign is to reduce the incidence
of red light running in the United States and the fatalities and
injuries it causes.
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