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Washington Think Tank Gives Thumbs Up to Traffic Reduction Measure

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Policy report coverA Washington state think tank issued a report last week exploring the potential congestion reduction benefits of Initiative 985 (view initiative text). The Washington Policy Center, a free-market policy analysis group covering a wide range of state issues, concluded that the measure which is up for voter approval in November could contribute significantly to reducing delays experienced on the state's roads. It also found that the needed reforms had to be made through the referendum process because lawmakers were reluctant to tackle the issue.

"During the 2008 legislative session, two bills were proposed that would have elevated congestion relief in the list of state priorities, but neither received a hearing," the think tank's Center for Transportation Director Michael Ennis wrote. "Initiative 985 would seismically shift the State's current policy back toward one that ties spending to a specific performance goal, traffic congestion relief."

The Washington Policy Center documented a typical monetary diversion in July. Officials took $156,000 raised from a tax imposed on motor vehicles and used the cash to fund a lobbying group known as the Transportation Choices Coalition. This activist group, in turn, lobbied for higher taxes and more subsidies for mass transit. The center's report explained how I-985 would restrict the uses of certain transportation funds for transportation uses. Over the next ten years, it would generate an estimated $1.7 billion for congestion reduction without any new taxes or other fees. This money would then be used to fund the synchronization of 4500 traffic signals statewide at a cost of $41.9 million. The state auditor would be responsible for creating performance measures to ensure that any changes made are actually reducing traffic delays. The auditor has already estimated a seven percent overall reduction from synchronization alone.

The initiative could also spend $3.1 million to expand the state's roadside assistance force which already responds to 48,000 traffic incidents each year. This amount would expand response capacity by up to twenty percent. According to the state auditor, traffic collisions account for about one-quarter of road delays. Additional roadside support capacity would reduce the amount of time needed to clear the road by about ten percent. Another provision of the initiative would stop the diversion of $100,000 in transportation funding used on "art projects."

Initiative 985 also takes aim at the revenue generated by red light cameras and speed cameras. According to the state's Office of Financial Management, twelve cities will generate $39,811,094 in revenue by 2013 with these systems. Cities would be prohibited from keeping this revenue or distributing it to private companies who offer for-profit ticketing services.

"City officials are likely to claim this would create a funding hole in their budgets, which would have to be filled from other revenue sources," Ennis wrote. "Yet, cities should have never planned on revenue in the first place, because their entire objective is to reduce traffic violations to zero, which would also eliminate revenue. As a result, governments, including the state, should never rely on traffic camera safety programs to pay for themselves or to cover other important public services."

After Tim Eyman and his colleagues succeeded in lining up 290,000 signatures to secure the initiative's place on the November ballot, the cities of Aberdeen, Longview, Mill Creek, Wenatchee and Yakima canceled plans to install the systems.

Because the center is an advocate for toll roads, it finds fault with Initiative 985 for effectively destroying the claimed benefit of High Occupancy Toll roads. The provision that opens up HOV lanes to general purpose use would prohibit the imposition on tolls on those lanes for 18 hours of the day. This prohibition would increase capacity and reduce congestion, unlike HOT lanes. TheNewspaper's analysis of a forthcoming HOT lane project in Northern Virginia shows that contract provisions are often specifically designed to generate congestion in order to encourage maximum use of the tolled lanes (view details). The initiative also would prohibit any toll revenue from being diverted to any purpose beyond the improvement of roads or congestion reduction.

A copy of the report is available in a 350k PDF file at the source link below. Source

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Ready-Made DUI Arrest Reports

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An increasing number of police officers are using pre-written arrest reports in drunk driving cases. In other words, they are writing out a batch of phony reports — including driving symptoms, slurred speech, failed field sobriety tests, admissions of drinking — and then just filling in the names, dates, etc., when they actually make an [...]

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Tennessee: Redflex Misses Camera Contract Deadline

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Redflex lateAn Australian red light camera operator lost the ability to issue tickets in Knoxville, Tennessee because it failed to send the required documents to the city on time. The Knoxville News Sentinel reports that officials have flatly refused to consider renewing a multi-million dollar contract with Redflex because the company did not properly file paperwork by July 31.

"They busted the deadline," city purchasing agent Boyce Evans told the Knoxville News. "I was very surprised. … Redflex knew that was going to be due before anybody."

In May 2006 the Melbourne-based company first installed the red light camera network that now covers fifteen Knoxville intersections. The devices last year generated $2,599,732 in revenue, with Redflex pocketing over sixty percent of the annual take. Because the original contract will expire on November 8, the city gave Redflex until July 31 to submit a proposal for a three-year extension that included a few revisions that the city wanted to make. Redflex blamed FedEx for delivering the package on August 1, while FedEx apologized for an unexpected problem in getting the package delivered.

"Unfortunately, the FedEx vehicle transporting the shipment from our facility to our Los Angeles sort facility arrived later than scheduled and missed the outbound flight," a FedEx customer relations employee wrote to Redflex. "Regrettably, efforts to expedite the shipment have been unsuccessful."

FedEx will refund the shipping cost of just over $30, which is scant consolation to the Australian company that lost the opportunity to take $5 million from Tennessee drivers. Some of these drivers themselves have claimed to be unfairly treated by the Redflex cameras. In 2006, a judge tossed out a red light camera ticket issued to an innocent man because the Redflex camera misread his license plate. Although victorious, the motorist was not compensated after losing $160 in wages to defend himself against the $50 citation. An even more blatant error was uncovered when a man was ticketed for stopping at a red light by the camera in February 2007. Another ticket in May 2007 accused the owner of a BMW convertible of running a red light in a pickup truck that she had never seen in her life.

Georgia-based Lasercraft and Germany's Traffipax both succeeded in ensuring their bids arrived on time and the city will choose which of the two it prefers to take over the program. Source

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Drunk 12 year-old Found Driving Stolen Car

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Police intercepted a car full of youths on Thursday night in Palmerston in Australia. The driver of the car was a 12 year-old girl who had a blood alcohol level of .65 percent. The legal limit in the Northern Territory is .05 percent. The females that were caught in a short chase that pursued after the car was stopped have been arrested. The police are still looking for two more youths.

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Ohio City Lays Off Workers as Red Light Camera Revenue Falls

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Redflex cameraDespite a tripling of profits from red light camera tickets, officials in Toledo, Ohio warned that even this amount has fallen fall short of their needs. Desperate for revenue, the city had planned on expanding its automated ticketing machine network to issue enough fines to create $2.5 million to spend on vital local projects. For a number of reasons, the city will only rake in $1.8 million in profit. As a result, up to fifteen city workers could lose their jobs by next month.

"I think there will be some layoffs," Councilman George Sarantou told WTOL-Television in an interview. "We've been assured that police and fire will not be part of those layoffs, but we also understand that there will be other departments that will be affected. You will have retirements and not filling positions saves money."

The city was an early leader in photo ticketing and had a clear plan for success. In 2001, Toledo was the first city in Ohio to start a red light camera program and the city has since spent a significant amount of money and effort lobbying the legislature against serious attempts to ban the ticketing technology. This lobbying paid off when former Governor Bob Taft last year vetoed a bill that would have imposed mild restrictions on camera use. Free from such restrictions, ticket profit grew steadily as the city installed new cameras. In 2004, Toledo collected approximately $280,000 in automated enforcement revenues with ten cameras. Last year, twenty-six cameras generated $606,025 for the city. In November, the city approved a new contract with Redflex, the Australian company that runs the ticketing program, limiting the for-profit to pocketing a bounty of just $55 for each ticket.

These changes only boosted the profit to just $1.8 million, an amount falling short of the $2.5 million goal because of three major problems. First, a planned expansion in the number of ticket cameras has been thwarted by technical difficulties. An increase in the ticket price from $95 to $120 that will not pass the city council until February. Finally, the city has experienced a five percent drop in traffic, limiting the number of motorists trapped by the cameras for entering an intersection a split-second after the light turns red. Source

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