Red-light cameras will do their job
- Share via
Red-light cameras will arrive in Costa Mesa in about a week. And it’s
about time.
Costa Mesa Police officials studied several intersections in the
city and deemed that Adams Avenue and Harbor Boulevard should be the
first to use them. With 259 red-light runners in an 18-hour period,
it’s painfully obviously why the cameras are needed.
Rather than losing a patrol car from the fleet, the Police
Department will rely on the cameras to cut down on the flagrant
violations. At the very least, the cameras will cause drivers to
reconsider stepping on the accelerator when the yellow and red lights
appear. This alone could prevent at least one accident making the
entire effort worthwhile.
A state Senate bill in the works, if it becomes law, will change a
few aspects. As it is now, those caught by red-light cameras receive
moving violations that become part of the driver’s record.
But because so many drivers try to cover their faces -- thus
making an even more dangerous situation -- the bill would force the
cameras to photograph the license plates instead of the drivers. That
would remove the violation from the driver’s record and would instead
make it a civil violation for the car owner. It would also carry a
lesser fine.
So the caveat created is that when a police car pulls over a
red-light runner, it would be a moving violation that goes on the
driver’s record. A violation caught on camera would not go on the
record and the owner, not the driver, would pay the fine.
While an inequity appears obvious, it still seems the compromise
is worth it. If the cameras prevent one accident or save one life,
then they’re worth some unfairness.
Costa Mesa should also have the cameras installed at other
intersections throughout the city since red-light runners are
everywhere and some intersections are certainly more prone than
others.
And for those who say the cameras are a violation of their
personal privacy, they themselves can do something about it: stop. No
foul, no photo.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.