Washington, Missouri Dumps Red Light Cameras

The Newspaper
by The Newspaper

The city council in Washington, Missouri no longer believes that red light cameras have a positive impact on safety. Members voted 6 to 2 on Monday to allow the automated ticketing contract with American Traffic Solutions (ATS) to expire, and Mayor Sandy Lucy agreed to draft a letter to the for-profit company making it clear that the council has no interest in ever bringing the devices back.

Councilman Tim Buddemeyer took issue with the attempt by an ATS front group to exploit the story of an accident in Arnold that took the life of ten-year-old Kayla Tremeear and goad the council into extending the contract. Buddemeyer told the story of his own cousin who was killed by a drunk driver who ran a red light.

“The bottom line: if there would have been a red light camera there, it wouldn’t have prevented the tragedy or accident,” Buddemeyer said. “But if there was an officer who would have seen him driving erratic and stopped him before he got to the intersection, she might be here as we speak. I don’t think the red light cameras save lives.”

Councilman John Rhodes pointed out that in the case of the incident that took the life of Kayla Tremeear, the driver admitted that he was fiddling with the radio and never saw the light.

“The irony here is that the worst he would have gotten is a ticket in the mail three weeks later asking him to pay the $100 fine for the red light,” Rhodes said. “That wouldn’t have eliminated the death, either… I guess the sad part of Kayla’s story was she didn’t die because her car was T-boned. She died because she was not seat belted. She was thrown from the vehicle and the car landed on top of her and crushed her. That’s a horrible way to die, but they didn’t tell you that story, you had to go investigate it and find it.”

Rhodes was not interested in making his decision based on an anecdote. In addition to the findings of the police chief presented last month, Rhodes analyzed six years’ worth of accident data and found that the primary cause of the accidents at the monitored intersections has been driver inattention. He found that only 1.8 percent of collisions — 14 out of 215 — were caused by drivers who violated a red light. National statistics in the United States and the United Kingdom agree that inattention is a primary cause of accidents.

“I can’t argue with the numbers,” American Traffic Solutions salesman Dan Reeb admitted in response to Rhodes. “I’m not going to argue that point.”

At the meeting, ATS representatives made a last minute offer to waive the contractual notice requirements to delay the vote. They also offered to hold educational presentations to the council, but it was not interested. Several members of the public, including former Councilman Guy Midkiff, addressed the council to express opposition to automated ticketing. After the final vote was taken, the audience burst into applause.

[Courtesy: Thenewspaper.com]

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  • CarPerson CarPerson on Jan 06, 2011

    More directly: Go to: http://www.regulations.gov/#!home Click on "Submit a comment". Enter: FHWA-2010-0159 in the "Enter Keyword or ID" Field Click "Search". You have 2000 characters to tell the Federal Highway Administration your thoughts on cities shorting the green lights to feed hapless drivers into shortened yellow lights (3 seconds is a favorite). The comment period ends on Friday, January 14th. Three-second yellows kill. Eradicate them and the carnage plunges in the intersections and the traffic cameras disappear. Four-point-five to stay alive. Spread the word.

  • Quentinthorne Quentinthorne on May 22, 2012

    Short yellows and not having an all-red time is a big hazard. i have had a friend that has been in an accident on his motorcycles due to a short yellow. The intersection had just received a shortened yellow time. Luckily he is OK.

  • Theflyersfan OK, I'm going to stretch the words "positive change" to the breaking point here, but there might be some positive change going on with the beaver grille here. This picture was at Car and Driver. You'll notice that the grille now dives into a larger lower air intake instead of really standing out in a sea of plastic. In darker colors like this blue, it somewhat conceals the absolute obscene amount of real estate this unneeded monstrosity of a failed styling attempt takes up. The Euro front plate might be hiding some sins as well. You be the judge.
  • Theflyersfan I know given the body style they'll sell dozens, but for those of us who grew up wanting a nice Prelude Si with 4WS but our student budgets said no way, it'd be interesting to see if Honda can persuade GenX-ers to open their wallets for one. Civic Type-R powertrain in a coupe body style? Mild hybrid if they have to? The holy grail will still be if Honda gives the ultimate middle finger towards all things EV and hybrid, hides a few engineers in the basement away from spy cameras and leaks, comes up with a limited run of 9,000 rpm engines and gives us the last gasp of the S2000 once again. A send off to remind us of when once they screamed before everything sounds like a whirring appliance.
  • Jeff Nice concept car. One can only dream.
  • Funky D The problem is not exclusively the cost of the vehicle. The problem is that there are too few use cases for BEVs that couldn't be done by a plug-in hybrid, with the latter having the ability to do long-range trips without requiring lengthy recharging and being better able to function in really cold climates.In our particular case, a plug-in hybrid would run in all electric mode for the vast majority of the miles we would drive on a regular basis. It would also charge faster and the battery replacement should be less expensive than its BEV counterpart.So the answer for me is a polite, but firm NO.
  • 3SpeedAutomatic 2012 Ford Escape V6 FWD at 147k miles:Just went thru a heavy maintenance cycle: full brake job with rotors and drums, replace top & bottom radiator hoses, radiator flush, transmission flush, replace valve cover gaskets (still leaks oil, but not as bad as before), & fan belt. Also, #4 fuel injector locked up. About $4.5k spread over 19 months. Sole means of transportation, so don't mind spending the money for reliability. Was going to replace prior to the above maintenance cycle, but COVID screwed up the market ( $4k markup over sticker including $400 for nitrogen in the tires), so bit the bullet. Now serious about replacing, but waiting for used and/or new car prices to fall a bit more. Have my eye on a particular SUV. Last I checked, had a $2.5k discount with great interest rate (better than my CU) for financing. Will keep on driving Escape as long as A/C works. 🚗🚗🚗
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