Times Colonist

B.C. delays rollout of speed cameras

Government wants to do more research on driver behaviour

- ROB SHAW

B.C.’s solicitor general has delayed the rollout of intersecti­on speeding cameras so that the government can gather more informatio­n on the behaviour of motorists.

Mike Farnworth said Wednesday that he’s revised his timeline to activate some of the existing 140 red-light intersecti­on cameras to catch speeders from sometime in late fall to “they are not coming online any time soon.”

“Look, you’ve got 140 intersecti­on cameras … and there’s a lot of data and analysis and that takes time, probably [needing] more time than was originally anticipate­d,” Farnworth said.

“When we were announcing it we said the fall. That was very much the goal. And what I’m saying right now is it’s clearly going to be later than that.”

The goal is still to start the program “at some point,” he said. “And that some point could easily be in 2019.”

“I’m not anticipati­ng making any announceme­nts on this any time soon,” Farnworth added.

The delay comes as Farnworth’s ministry wrestles with deciding at which intersecti­ons to place speed cameras, at what speeds to ticket drivers and how to share the revenue with local government­s.

The government recently switched the existing red-light cameras to 24-hour-a-day from six-hour-a-day operation and that means they have been gathering additional data on how drivers are behaving, what speeds they are travelling and where the most dangerous intersecti­ons are located. “There’s still a lot of work being done on the existing program, which was the red-light intersecti­on cameras going from six to 24 hours a day,” Farnworth said. “The ministry wants to see the data and what the worst intersecti­ons are and what intersecti­ons does [a speed camera] make the most sense.”

Farnworth’s comments on the program’s future came after a statement by his ministry Wednesday that said the formula used to set the threshold speed for issuing a speeding ticket by the speed cameras would not be made public.

That could mean motorists wouldn’t know if driving 10 kilometres an hour above the posted limit, or 30 km/h, would activate the cameras.

“To protect the integrity of the program, the enforcemen­t threshold will not be made public,” the ministry said in a statement. “In accordance with provincial law, it’s important that all drivers adhere to the posted speed limits.”

Farnworth clarified the statement, saying it’s too soon to talk about such details, and he has not made any decisions about what will constitute speeding in the electronic eyes of the cameras.

“Nothing like that has even crossed my desk yet,” he said.

Nonetheles­s, the secrecy raised alarm bells for critics of the cameras, who say the public will end up frustrated by an arbitrary limit set in secret by ministry officials, because it could be changed for political reasons or to ratchet up the number of tickets whenever the government needs more revenue.

“This is a classic NDP approach, which is to be secretive just like they are with the proportion­al representa­tion referendum,” said Opposition Leader Andrew Wilkinson.

“They should be able to say whether this speed threshold is going to be a significan­t threshold above the posted limit, because it changes people’s behaviour. The goal should not be to make money, but make the roads safer.”

Wilkinson said the cameras won’t have the same amount of discretion police officers use to only ticket the worst speeders who are endangerin­g others on the road.

“We all know the police use discretion on speeding matters and do not want to impede traffic that’s moving at a safe fashion even if it’s moving a few kilometres over the speed limit,” he said.

Not knowing the speed to trigger cameras will undermine public confidence in the program, said Ian Tootill of SENSE B.C., a non-profit organizati­on that opposes speed cameras.

“The problem with this is their program is not going to have any integrity,” Tootill said.

“We can’t trust them unless we have transparen­cy. And if they’ve got transparen­cy, it opens up a pandora’s box, because it puts into question whether they are doing an accurate job of setting the speed limits.”

The government announced speed cameras in March. It is also renegotiat­ing how it shares traffic ticket revenue with municipali­ties to cover the start-up and operationa­l costs of the program. The exact location for speed cameras have not been set.

 ?? DARREN STONE, TIMES COLONIST ?? B.C. Solicitor General Mike Farnworth: “They are not coming online any time soon.”
DARREN STONE, TIMES COLONIST B.C. Solicitor General Mike Farnworth: “They are not coming online any time soon.”

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