Archive for the ‘Speeding’ Category

Texas Speed Limit May be Lowered to Boost Toll Revenue

Sunday, December 2nd, 2007

Texas Speed Limit May be Lowered to Boost Toll Revenue

Toll road contract in Texas allows state to lower speed limits on nearby interstate freeway to avoid paying penalties to a private company.

The Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT) has agreed to consider lowering the maximum speed limit on a stretch of interstate highway that competes with a planned toll road. Cintra-Zachary, a joint Spanish-US venture, paid TxDOT $1.3 billion for the right to collect tolls on 40-miles of State Highway 130 set for construction beginning in 2009. Although TxDOT suggested that free market competition was part of the goal of using a public-private partnerships to construct and operate roads, the contract it signed on March 22 to construct this portion of SH130 was specifically designed to limit the desirability of alternate, free routes.

“The compensation amount owing from TxDOT to Developer on account of the competing facility shall be equal to the loss of toll revenues, if any, attributable to the competing facility,” the contract states. (11.3.2.1)

The provision ensures no improvements can be made to nearby roads unless the agency issues payment to the Spanish-US private consortium with taxpayer funds. TxDOT can reduce the amount of compensation owed, however, if it agrees to increase toll revenue by imposing a “decrease in the maximum daytime posted speed limit for passenger vehicles on all or a substantial portion of I-35 where it runs generally parallel to the Facility.” This means that TxDOT can recover money generated by additional tolls as motorists abandon I-35 because of the lowered limit and increased congestion.
 

More here:  http://www.thenewspaper.com/news/20/2025.asp

Maryland Pushes for $2000 Speed Camera Ticket, Virginia Follows

Wednesday, November 28th, 2007

Lawmakers in Virginia and Maryland plan legislation authorizing speed cameras in highway work zones that would generate $500 and $2000 tickets.

Officials in both Maryland and Virginia are planning to introduce legislation allowing cameras in so-called highway work zones that would issue automated tickets worth $500 in Virginia and $2000 in Maryland. Lawmakers are following the lead of Illinois which last year introduced $1000 freeway speed camera tickets that have generated significant revenue. Oregon will begin its own work zone photo ticketing program next year, and states like Colorado are exploring an expansion of existing speed camera programs to include freeway work zones.

More here:  http://www.thenewspaper.com/news/20/2028.asp

San Jose sued over dubious speeding tickets

Tuesday, November 27th, 2007

San Jose sued over dubious speeding tickets

LAW FIRM WANTS $1 MILLION FOR DRIVERS FINED UNDER PHOTO-RADAR PROGRAM

By John Woolfolk

Mercury News

A San Jose law firm filed a $1 million claim against the city Thursday over a photo-radar traffic program the city scuttled in March amid concerns it was illegal.

Attorney James McManis is seeking refunds for motorists who paid speeding fines under the city’s Neighborhood Automated Speed Compliance Program, or NASCOP. McManis said the claim lays the groundwork for a possible class-action lawsuit on behalf of thousands of drivers who paid fines that ranged from $99 to $350.

“We’ve got this illegal program that the city of San Jose has perpetrated for a number of years, and we’ve got to get that money back for the motoring public,” McManis said.

NASCOP, which San Jose launched in 1996, featured a city traffic engineer in an unmarked van equipped with a speed-sensing radar gun and digital cameras to snap cars speeding by. Speeding tickets were then mailed to the registered owners of those cars.

More from the source:  http://www.mercurynews.com/search/ci_7024105?IADID


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