The Evening Leader

Court: Traffic camera fine revenue can reduce state funding

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COLUMBUS (AP) — Reducing state funding to local municipali­ties by the amount those communitie­s collected through the use of traffic cameras doesn’t violate the state Constituti­on, the Ohio Supreme Court ruled Thursday.

The court also upheld the constituti­onality of a law requiring that municipali­ties must pay an advance deposit to cover court costs related to enforcing the ticket program.

The court’s unanimous decision found the 2019 law creating those requiremen­ts doesn’t conflict with the Ohio Constituti­on’s provision governing communitie­s’ home rule. The ruling responded to a lawsuit brought by Newburgh Heights and East Cleveland challengin­g the state requiremen­ts.

In arguing that the law was unconstitu­tional, attorneys for those communitie­s said state lawmakers were trying to “make photo enforcemen­t programs prohibitiv­ely expensive and cumbersome to operate.”

In its ruling, the court said that, with limited exceptions, the Ohio Constituti­on doesn’t require lawmakers to appropriat­e money to municipali­ties. In addition, the Constituti­on “does not create a specific right for a municipali­ty to receive local-government funds from the state,” wrote Justice Sharon Kennedy.

In past rulings, the court has upheld the overall right of municipali­ties to use traffic cameras to catch speeders.

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