Current Temperature

7.0°C

November 14, 2024 November 14, 2024

UCP looking at future of photo radar in province with review of rules

Posted on January 23, 2020 by Vauxhall Advance
GRANT HUNTER

By Trevor Busch
Vauxhall Advance
tbusch@tabertimes.com

Re-examining what appears to be a perennial complaint from Albertans, the province’s UCP government has announced another review of the current rules governing the municipal use of photo radar.

Effective Dec. 1, 2019, municipalities and police services were subject to a freeze in relation to the installation of new or upgraded photo radar devices. Rules for site selection, operational restrictions, and data collection are now all under review.

Mounting allegations that some municipalities in the province may be abusing photo radar as a “backdoor tax revenue” generating device prompted the UCP to initiate the review.

During the announcement in late November 2019, Transportation Minister Ric McIver observed that Alberta has three times as many photo radar units per capita than British Columbia “but our roads are not meaningfully safer.”

The government says the freeze could last up to two years as the province analyzes the photo radar model and collects information.

“I’m not going to say that every municipality was abusing it. In fact, I can’t speak to who was or who wasn’t,” said Taber-Warner MLA Grant Hunter, who also serves as associate minister of Red Tape Reduction. “Everything we do should be based on science, should be based upon the numbers, and if they were putting these things up to basically just be another tax on consumers or customers, or citizens, then I don’t think Albertans are okay with that. If it’s a measure to be able to reduce harm, stop accidents, and people from being hurt, then I think people are interested in that.”

In the previous government’s third-party report released in February 2019, NDP transportation minister Brian Mason pointed out that photo radar was utilized by 27 municipalities and generated $220 million a year in revenue, but only reduced collisions by 1.4 per cent.

Following the report’s release, Mason mandated changes to limit or ban photo radar at perceived revenue-generating locations. Photo radar is now prohibited at locations with rapid speed limit changes, known as transition zones, and on multi-lane highways unless there is documented proof of safety concerns.

Municipalities and police services were also required to have detailed plans in place by March 2020 regarding the use of photo radar, which needs to be backed up by collision data to prove it is an effective road safety tool. The UCP has indicated their government has no plans to repeal the changes implemented by the NDP, but that their review found that data is limited and inconsistent, prompting another examination of the issue for Albertans.

“There was obviously a question in Albertans’ minds, and we were very much in favour of it,” said Hunter. “So we need to take a look at the numbers and see whether science backs this up.”

In a separate development, a budget implementation bill passed by the UCP in the fall increases the provincial cut of photo radar tickets to 40 per cent from 27 per cent.

Leave a Reply

Get More Vauxhall Advance
Log In To Comment Latest Paper Subscribe