Tennessee City Defies State Legislature, Renews Traffic Cameras

The Newspaper
by The Newspaper

The city of Red Bank, Tennessee voted Tuesday to extend its automated ticketing contract with American Traffic Solutions (ATS) for twelve years, in open defiance of the state legislature. Earlier this month, the House Transportation Committee gave its approval to proposed legislation that would place a temporary moratorium on red light camera and speed camera program renewals while a set of engineering and operational standards are developed to ensure statewide uniformity. The committee took great pains to ensure that no city would be deprived of any existing red light camera or photo radar revenue by refusing to ban any existing practices.

One of the mildly restrictive new standards that would take effect for contracts adopted after the year 2012 is a prohibition on the practice of rewarding a private contractor based on how many photo citations the company is able to issue. Red Bank’s contract renewal dodge ensures that the city will continue to allow ATS to keep sixty-three percent of the ticket revenue generated until the year 2022. Cities prefer per-ticket compensation schemes because they provide a significant incentive for the vendor to maintain ticketing operations at peak levels. Since 2007, the speed cameras and red light cameras in Red Bank have generated $1.1 million in revenue.

Red Bank’s action is far from unique. In 2009, a number of Texas cities extended contracts for up to twenty-five years in response to a legislative threat to sunset use of red light cameras in the state by forbidding renewal of any existing contracts. Ultimately, however, the legislation failed to pass and the cities ended up adopting the long-term contracts for no reason. In Montana, however, municipalities did not get away with contract extension defiance when the legislature began debating limitations on the use of cameras.

“We saw a couple municipalities rush to get contracts signed before the effective date of the bill — which I found offensive,” Montana state Senator John Brueggeman (R-Polson) said.

Montana legislators fired back by stripping the exceptions and enacting a total ban on all forms of photo enforcement. At least one Tennessee lawmaker predicted that cities would attempt to extend their contracts during the legislature’s deliberations.

“People are going to try to get under what we are trying to do here, extending contracts say five, six, seven years,” state Representative John Tidwell (D-New Johnsonville) said one week before Red Bank’s action. “That certainly would be dirty pool.”

A number of Tennessee legislators suggested the only legal option to deal with such defiance would be to impose a total ban on cameras, as happened in Montana. Before Red Bank’s action, House Transportation Chairman Bill Harmon (D-Dunlap) said there were not enough votes in the legislature to impose such a ban.

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  • Akatsuki Akatsuki on Jan 22, 2010

    Well, I wonder if cloaking yourself with the authority of law you don't possess and sending people extortion letters is a jailable offense?

  • Texlovera Texlovera on Jan 22, 2010

    I find it difficult to believe that the people of Tennessee and Texas, whose common heritage includes Davey Crockett, will not rise up and throw out the bums who are enacting these laws and making these contracts.

    • Chitbox dodge Chitbox dodge on Jan 22, 2010

      It is a new day and age anywhere in America. Very few of the really politically active remain, only the politically subdued are around. It is interesting to note that Red Bank came out at the beginning of the week with the statement that they were about $700K in the black. It was also figured the traffic cameras brought in $12M (even though nearly all of that was given to the contractor which doesn't add up to me) in revenue for the city all the while having 27 businesses close in the past year. Fact is, mayor Joe Glasscock "don't give a damn". He thinks he has found his trump card for "political continuity" in that he doesn't have to raise taxes to keep up with constituency's need for things communal and he comes off as being leader of a safety conscience bedroom community. But the jokes on him. He's the emperor of a dying community quickly filling with no real reason to be if the remainder of it's businesses close soon enough. The ones it really hurts are the ones who can't afford to move...which Red Bank is rapidly filling with.

  • Rob Woytuck Weight is also a factor for ferries which for instance in British Columbia, Canada are part of the highway system.
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  • Probert That X frame was a killer. No nostalgia for these things to be honest. Yup - life of the party....
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  • Urlik Multi level parking garages are going to be issues as well.
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