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04/23/2024 10:29 PM
Pennsylvania House of Representatives
https://www.legis.state.pa.us/cfdocs/Legis/CSM/showMemoPublic.cfm?chamber=H&SPick=20150&cosponId=20460
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House of Representatives
Session of 2015 - 2016 Regular Session

MEMORANDUM

Posted: June 22, 2016 04:20 PM
From: Representative John Taylor
To: All House members
Subject: Photo Speed Enforcement Cameras Pilot Program
 
In the near future, I will be introducing legislation to put photo speed enforcement cameras along U.S. 1 (Roosevelt Boulevard) from the Bucks County line to I-76. There have been many fatalities along this section of Roosevelt Boulevard as a result of excessive speeding.

A study by the International Cochrane Collaboration found that photo radar devices reduce all speed related crashes by as much as 25 percent. For crashes involving fatalities, photo radar drops that statistic by as much as 44 percent.

This legislation would place photo speed enforcement cameras on U.S Route 1 in Philadelphia from the Bucks County Line to I-76. This would restrict the installation of speed enforcement cameras only to this defined area. A City of the First Class would choose to manage the cameras or hire a contractor to manage the cameras and the enforcement program. Before the cameras could be used, PennDOT would need to approve the cameras and appropriate signs would need to be placed on U.S. 1 alerting drivers to the use of photo speed enforcement devices.

A person who violates the speed limit and is recorded by a photo speed enforcement device shall pay a $150 fine. No points shall be assessed for this violation and no tickets will be issued if someone is going less than ten miles per hour in excess of the legal speed limit.

Privacy of these images is important and strong under the legislation. Law enforcement may only access the photo images if they are conducting a criminal investigation. Recorded images shall be destroyed within one year of final disposition of a recorded event. The legislation also includes several valid defenses to violations including:

1. The person named in the notice of the violation was not operating the vehicle at the time of the violation and the owner submits evidence that he or she was not the driver at the time and discloses the identity of the driver.

2. The vehicle was reported to a police department as stolen prior to the time the violation occurred.

3. The person receiving the notice of the violation was not the owner of the vehicle at the time.

I invite you to join me in sponsoring this legislation. Thank you.



Introduced as HB2233