Saturday, November 06, 2010

Houston wants to continue red-light cameras after voters rejected them

Whenever red-light cameras are proposed, we're always told the goal is public safety, not revenue generation. But after Houston voters elected to remove the cameras, all the official complaints are about the resulting revenue shortfall and the city is looking for ways to keep them running over voters' objections through the end of the current contract. Reports the Houston Chronicle:
Although voters abolished Houston's red light camera system Tuesday, the 70 cameras have the green light to keep recording traffic violations for months as the city weighs a legal strategy for exiting its contract with the firm operating the cameras, city officials say.

Anti-camera activists slammed the delay Wednesday, insisting on immediately terminating the five-year contract — whatever the cost - with ATS, the Arizona firm that manages Houston's system. The May 2009 contract has a termination clause that requires the city to provide the company with a 120-day notice of cancellation, a period when the cameras will still be in full operation and civil fines issued, according to the city attorney.
Now the Mayor says elminating the cameras will require multi-million dollar cuts to the police department budget:
Mayor Annise Parker acknowledged the referendum has exacerbated ongoing challenges with the city's budget and noted HPD, which was the recipient of funds from the camera program, would be responsible for cutting its budget to make up for the immediate $10 million gap created by the vote. 

"We're going to try to do it in a way that does not impact public safety," she said, although she acknowledged that furloughs or layoffs of city employees may be necessary, a position she has maintained since passing the fiscal 2011 budget with more than $70 million of unrealized revenue and spending cuts.
A column in the Galveston News put it succinctly:
If red-light cameras are about public safety, no one has made a convincing case.

In Houston, when the election returns showed that voters had put an end to red-light cameras, the story was about money, not about public safety.
The company profiting red-light cameras spent $1.7 million to oppose the ballot initiative, a sum which dwarfed camera opponents' spending by 10-1. It didn't matter; voters still rejected the cameras, just as they did in College Station last year. Notably, other jurisdictions across the country rejected red-light cameras wherever they were challenged, this go-round in Mukilteo, Washington; Anaheim, California; and Baytown, Texas.

On Facebook, the group that successfully challenged the cameras is urging Houston drivers not to pay tickets received after the plebiscite:
If you currently have a pending RLC ticket do not pay it. They can do nothing to you, can not issue a warrant, can not report you to a credit bureau and you can still register your car. Don't let them scare you. WE WON, don't pay, nothing will happen to you, they only try to scare you out of your $$$$, just don't pay...Read Texas Transportation code 707, if you read it, you will see there is little they can do. :P
Though I'm not a lawyer, from my understanding of the statutes that's probably accurate advice. As a practical matter, the city has no means to collect fines going forward and only dubious legal authority to do so. Either way, whether they're removed now or four months from now, red-light cameras in Houston are a goner. If I had my druthers, the Legislature would follow voters' lead next year and eliminate this misbegotten cash cow across the board.

RELATED: More from Kuff, who opposed the ballot initiative and wishes the pro-camera crowd had engaged in more negative campaigning.

7 comments:

  1. Amen Scott. We voted them out in College Station. The City "drug"their feet a little bit'; but did comply with the majority vote.

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  2. Kinda makes me think that the COH is trying their best to ignore the voter's mandate. Do they care what their constituents want?

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  3. Mayor Annise Parker campaigned hard in favor of the cameras and ADMITTED that in additional to public safety, they create a $10 million dollar revenue stream. This is a shining example of more "public safety" crap that we have been fed (like seat belts) that is actually a money grab from government. She will do what is right and turn the damn things off but right now they are looking for some more money.

    It's also important to note that the cameras came in under Bill White.

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  4. Your quote states:

    "Read Texas Transportation code 707, if you read it, you will see there is little they can do."

    707 is a rather lengthly chapter. Can anyone be more specific?

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  5. If they have to keep the cameras 4 more months do they have to be operating? It seems that the termination fee required by the company has nothing to do with whether or not the cameras are in operation.

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  6. "The May 2009 contract has a termination clause that requires the city to provide the company with a 120-day notice of cancellation, a period when the cameras will still be in full operation and civil fines issued, according to the city attorney."
    So? Put masking tape over the camera lenses. They are still in "full" operation, but can't see.

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  7. I would argue that the Parker AND the White administrations were totally incompetent in handling these RLC's. White, for allowing them to sign onto a contract that had such restrictive cancellation terms and did not have a Force Majeure clause. (and having the voters outlaw them certainly falls under Force Majeure). Parker for not notifying ATS that the contract was subject to cancellation as soon as it went on the ballot, if not sooner. That would have been 70 days notice at a minimum. If they had notified ATS when the petition drive started back in April, then they would have had LOTS of time to notify ATS before the election.

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