Texas: Red Light Cameras Boost League City Accidents

The Newspaper
by The Newspaper

Red light cameras in League City, Texas have failed to reduce accidents according to preliminary data provided by the Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT). Since October 2009, the Australian firm Redflex Traffic Systems has issued citations at three intersections along FM 518. Local activist Byron Schirmbeck analyzed TxDOT reports and found the number of accidents at these locations increased after camera installation. In November, Schirmbeck led the November successful referendum effort twenty miles away in Baytown where voters rejected the use of automated ticketing machines.

Overall, the total number of accidents increased 20 percent at League City’s monitored intersections. Rear-end collisions jumped the most with an increase of 68 percent. Only injury crashes saw a decrease from a rate of 19 before to 16 afterwards. The TxDOT reports offer a limited look at the effect of cameras, with 8 to 9 months of data for the “after” period and 18 months for the “before” reports. The analysis reflects accident rates on an annualized basis.

The data also showed that two of the three intersections chosen for camera use had no problem with red-light related accidents. At FM 2094 there were no accidents of the type red light cameras are meant to address in the 18 months prior to installation. Highway 3 had only one such accident. The intersection of Interstate 45 and FM 518 did have a red-light related accident problem before cameras were installed, but it also had yellow signal warnings that were so short they violated the law. The interval between the green and red lights was set to just four seconds — 0.7 seconds shorter than the minimum required under TxDOT regulations at an intersection with a posted 50 MPH speed limit. As a result, the city was forced to refund or cancel $130,000 worth of tickets.

Schirmbeck hopes to increase safety by giving voters in League City the same chance that Baytown had to ban the devices.

“Our petition cost the camera company millions in lost revenue and over $200,000 in setting up their fake front group to try to block and overturn our election,” Schirmbeck said in a statement. “We still have a long way to go… We will also continue to work together with other citizens that want to reject the cameras in their towns. Port Lavaca, Texas has already turned in their petition and Humble is working on theirs. We also urge the Texas legislature to renew their efforts to ban the cameras statewide. It is shameful that private citizens have to do what the legislature failed to do last session.”

A copy of the analysis is available in a 75k PDF file at the source link below.

Analysis of League City red light camera accident data (Byron Schirmbeck, 1/19/2011)

[Courtesy: Thenewspaper.com]

The Newspaper
The Newspaper

More by The Newspaper

Comments
Join the conversation
2 of 6 comments
  • CarPerson CarPerson on Jan 19, 2011
    Get rid of the three-second yellows and you: 1. Reduce the panic and terror of yellow traffic lights 2. Reduce intersection crashes, deaths, and injuries 3. Reduce distracted and impaired driver-caused crashes 4. Reduce the number of Legal Red Light Runners 5. Reduce the number of Illegal Red Light Runners 6. Reduce the number of vehicles and pedestrians not clearing the intersection 7. Stop forcing drivers who cannot stop into the intersection against their will 8. Allow longer-stopping vehicles to stop 9. Allow more normal, safe, and sane yellow light stopping time and distance 10. Eliminate the corrupting financial gain driving traffic camera installations
  • 67dodgeman 67dodgeman on Jan 19, 2011

    Hey! I live there. My son got tagged by the one on 518 and hwy 3. Turned right on red, but only slowed down didn't stop. I think half the tickets issued are the right on red rolling variety. The 518 and 45 intersection used to be the worst around, traffic wise. There are several very close intersections with lights on either side, so within a 2 block distance on either side of 45 you had 6 red lights to go through. None properly timed, none synchronized. It's taken my 30 minutes to travel a 1/2 mile during rush hour. Many impatient drivers try to sneak by on a light pink light in bumper to bumper traffic. Many get caught with the tail-end of the car still in the intersection. Technically running a red light at about 2 mph. The only good thing the cameras did was force someone to actually time the yellow and increase it.

  • Kwik_Shift_Pro4X Thankfully I don't have to deal with GDI issues in my Frontier. These cleaners should do well for me if I win.
  • Theflyersfan Serious answer time...Honda used to stand for excellence in auto engineering. Their first main claim to fame was the CVCC (we don't need a catalytic converter!) engine and it sent from there. Their suspensions, their VTEC engines, slick manual transmissions, even a stowing minivan seat, all theirs. But I think they've been coasting a bit lately. Yes, the Civic Type-R has a powerful small engine, but the Honda of old would have found a way to get more revs out of it and make it feel like an i-VTEC engine of old instead of any old turbo engine that can be found in a multitude of performance small cars. Their 1.5L turbo-4...well...have they ever figured out the oil dilution problems? Very un-Honda-like. Paint issues that still linger. Cheaper feeling interior trim. All things that fly in the face of what Honda once was. The only thing that they seem to have kept have been the sales staff that treat you with utter contempt for daring to walk into their inner sanctum and wanting a deal on something that isn't a bare-bones CR-V. So Honda, beat the rest of your Japanese and Korean rivals, and plug-in hybridize everything. If you want a relatively (in an engineering way) easy way to get ahead of the curve, raise the CAFE score, and have a major point to advertise, and be able to sell to those who can't plug in easily, sell them on something that will get, for example, 35% better mileage, plug in when you get a chance, and drives like a Honda. Bring back some of the engineering skills that Honda once stood for. And then start introducing a portfolio of EVs once people are more comfortable with the idea of plugging in. People seeing that they can easily use an EV for their daily errands with the gas engine never starting will eventually sell them on a future EV because that range anxiety will be lessened. The all EV leap is still a bridge too far, especially as recent sales numbers have shown. Baby steps. That's how you win people over.
  • Theflyersfan If this saves (or delays) an expensive carbon brushing off of the valves down the road, I'll take a case. I understand that can be a very expensive bit of scheduled maintenance.
  • Zipper69 A Mini should have 2 doors and 4 cylinders and tires the size of dinner plates.All else is puffery.
  • Theflyersfan Just in time for the weekend!!! Usual suspects A: All EVs are evil golf carts, spewing nothing but virtue signaling about saving the earth, all the while hacking the limbs off of small kids in Africa, money losing pits of despair that no buyer would ever need and anyone that buys one is a raging moron with no brains and the automakers who make them want to go bankrupt.(Source: all of the comments on every EV article here posted over the years)Usual suspects B: All EVs are powered by unicorns and lollypops with no pollution, drive like dreams, all drivers don't mind stopping for hours on end, eating trays of fast food at every rest stop waiting for charges, save the world by using no gas and batteries are friendly to everyone, bugs included. Everyone should torch their ICE cars now and buy a Tesla or Bolt post haste.(Source: all of the comments on every EV article here posted over the years)Or those in the middle: Maybe one of these days, when the charging infrastructure is better, or there are more options that don't cost as much, one will be considered as part of a rational decision based on driving needs, purchasing costs environmental impact, total cost of ownership, and ease of charging.(Source: many on this site who don't jump on TTAC the split second an EV article appears and lives to trash everyone who is a fan of EVs.)
Next