Conventional speed enforcement has its limitations. You can only pull over one vehicle at a time. This method is unproductive, slow and expensive from the government’s point of view.
With the rapid development of technology, clever ways have been developed to make the process speedier.
So the government in its great ‘wisdom’ decided it wasn’t collecting enough money with the old system.
There were just too many elements that was involved with an actual police officer pulling you over to hand out a citation. The first thing was having to hire the officer himself to pull you over. Next he had to pull you over with his police vehicle which is expensive in itself. And then what he let you off with just a warning?
And last, in the time it took the officer to pull you over and write a ticket, many more people go speeding by, so there was money lost from not pulling them over!
Now, introducing the photo radar. It is the latest tactic on the governments part to make money. Oh, in the name of safety of course. In just a few minutes a photo radar can catch many cars speeding on a single road.
With photo radar also known as traffic cameras, speeding tickets are simply mailed to the offender. Talk about customer service!
Since its’ beginning, photo radar has been proven to: Save police department’s time and money. Improve conviction rates in traffic court. Maximize city resources available for traffic enforcement. Increase individual insurance rates.
There are little more than twenty states or so that use this method of photo radar to hand out speeding tickets, but its presence is on the rise.
The photo radar is growing in popularity simply because of the points stated previously.
Cities are starting to latch on to the photo radar band wagon because of the revenue generating potential. Its relatively simple for a city to have one installed and the photo radar pays for itself quickly.
In areas that are financially strapped, photo radar gives them an immediate answer to their money misery.
Just think about it, within a short time a photo radar can take pictures of many speeding motorists, what it would take many officers to accomplish traditionally.
How does it work? Photo radar, as the name suggests, is a combination of a camera coupled with a radar gun. The two work together. The radar gun is preprogrammed to function at a particular speed.
Say the speeding limit is 55 mph on a stretch of road but it detects a car cruising at 60 mph it will take a picture.
When this happens, the radar gun will instantly trigger the camera to take a picture of the entire vehicle (sometimes it’s just the back, other times its the back and front of the vehicle) to get the license plate information. The picture is electronically filed away and the process is carried on throughout the day and night. Hundreds of individuals will have their picture taken – courtesy of Big Brother.
On the following day the photo radar pictures will be accessed and gone through by several people.
What the examiners are looking for is the clarity of the picture and if the plate number can be read.
Once the legible pictures from the photo radar have been determined and the license plate numbers ran through the bureau of motor vehicles database, if the car is registered to say, a female, and there is a female driving the vehicle, BINGO, a speeding ticket will be on its way to the registered owners address.
This process is repeated with the next picture and so on until all available photos have been examined. Photo radar enforcement is on the rise, hopefully this article will give you a heads up about it.
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August 23rd, 2010
Steven Swihart
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