Traffic Enforcement Camera Effectiveness
UK-Based Studies
Sign used to delineate speed cameras in the United Kingdom
In the UK, the effectiveness issue has become particularly contentious since the introduction of Safety Camera Partnerships. Studies in the UK have provided analysis of the effects of speed cameras deployed by Safety Camera Partnerships.
An initial three-year study commissioned by the Department for Transport (DfT) [17]
showed that vehicle speeds dropped by seven percent at sites where
cameras were installed and claimed that "at camera sites, there was
also a reduction of over 100 fatalities per annum (40% fewer). There
were 870 fewer people killed or seriously injured and 4,030 fewer
personal injury collisions per annum. There was a clear correlation
between reductions in speed and reductions in PICs" (personal injury
collisions). The three year DfT report was criticised in some quarters
for giving only a small amount of attention to the phenomenon of regression to the mean
(RTM). Since the cameras were placed at sites where a high number of
accidents had been observed, a lower number of accidents might be
expected in subsequent years simply by random chance. Professor Mervyn
Stone of the The Department of Statistical Science at University College London was commissioned by the BBC Radio Four Today Programme to write a report[11] about UK speed cameras and also Traffic Calming.
His report criticises some of the methodologies used in some speed
camera studies (including the DfT three year report) and in particular
he mentions the RTM effect.
A follow-up four-year independent study commissioned by the DfT [18]
concluded "after allowing for the long-term trend, but without allowing
for selection effects (such as regression-to-mean) there was a 22%
reduction in personal injury collisions (PICs) at sites after cameras
were introduced. Overall 42% fewer people were killed or seriously
injured. At camera sites, there was also a reduction of over 100
fatalities per annum (32% fewer). There were 1,745 fewer people killed
or seriously injured and 4,230 fewer personal injury collisions per
annum in 2004." In addition, the four year report includes statistical
modeling of the RTM effect based on a reduced set of camera sites for
which suitable data was available (see [19]
appendix H --- tables H3 and H7). Rural roads were excluded from the
RTM modeling, because of difficulties establishing representative
models for such roads, although the report does state it is likely that
RTM effects will be larger for rural roads because expected collision
frequencies tend to be lower than on urban roads. The report urges
caution in drawing too strong conclusions from a small data set. Based
on the RTM modeling undertaken the report suggests that for personal
injury collisions (non-serious collisions resulting in injuries) a
16.2% reduction in injuries was due to the cameras, a 6.7% reduction
was due to regression to the mean and a 7.9% reduction was due to the
general downward trend in accidents over the period. For fatal and
serious collisions, the modeling estimated a 10.4% reduction in such
collisions due to the cameras, a 34.8% reduction due to regression to
the mean and a 9.3% reduction due to general downward trends in
accident rates.
A 2006 DfT report "Contributory factors to road accidents"[12] uses STATS19
data to analyse accidents have speed as a contributory factor. The
factors "exceeding the speed limit" or "going too fast for conditions"
were judged by officers at the scene of road accidents. It was
suggested that "exceeding the speed limit" would be marked as a cause
if the officer had reason to believe from external evidence (for
example "skid marks on the road") that the driver was doing so.
Exceeding the speed limit was said to be a factor in 12% of fatal road
accidents and 5% of all road accidents.
An independent UK-based controlled study[13] uses STATS19
data to show that speed cameras are effective at reducing accidents and
injuries but added that wider deployment would improve their
effectiveness.
Two 2006 UK studies have questioned the accuracy of STATS19
data when used to look at serious injury rates since there is ambiguity
in whether an injury is judged serious or minor and the UK police
records do not match hospital admission records. The first study
"Changes in safety on England’s roads: analysis of hospital
statistics", published by the British Medical Journal[14]
concludes that "the overall fall seen in police statistics for
non-fatal road traffic injuries probably represents a fall in
completeness of reporting of these injuries". The second study
"Under-reporting of Road Casualties – Phase 1", published by the DfT,[15] recommends that reports should not rely solely on STATS19 injury data (none of the reports mentioned do).
In addition, some UK police officers have confirmed that speed
cameras do not reduce casualties, they are just for revenue generation[16].
US-Based Studies
In the United States, questions of effectiveness have centered on
the more common red light cameras. A number of government-sponsored
studies have addressed the question of whether, on balance, the devices
produce a safety benefit. A U.S. Safety Evaluation of Red-Light Cameras,
for example, found that red light cameras led to a decrease in
right-angle crashes and a smaller increase in the number of rear-end
collisions. The study applied estimates from a 1997 study of the cost
of accidents based on severity to conclude the cameras yielded a
positive overall cost benefit from a reduction in more expensive
right-angle injury collisions.
A 2005 Virginia Department of Transportation study
of the long-term effect of camera enforcement in the state found a
decrease in the number of right-angle crashes, but an increase in
rear-end crashes and an overall increase in the number of accidents
causing injuries. The report recommended further study of the issue to
determine whether the severity of the eliminated red light running
crashes was greater than that of the induced rear-end crashes. The
department released a more extensive evaluation of the data in 2007
which showed that the overall number of accidents at intersections with
red light cameras increased in four of the five cities using the
technology. Fairfax City reported a 7% drop in the overall number of
accidents and a 5% drop in injury accidents while overall the state's
cameras were correlated with a 29% increase in overall accidents and an
18% increase in injury accidents. (Study text in PDF).
This study also notably found that red-light violations decreased by
94% at one Fairfax County intersection, after the advent of a 1.5
second longer yellow-light cycle.[17]
A 2004 Texas Transportation Institute
study found, "crashes decrease with an increase in yellow interval
duration and a reduction in speed limit." After 1.0 second was added to
the yellow signal timing at test intersections, accidents dropped by 35
to 40%. This compares with a 6.4% reduction for "area-wide officer
enforcement of intersection traffic control devices... during the time
of the enforcement activity" (Study text in PDF).
A 2005 study of the Raleigh, North Carolina
red light camera program conducted by the Institute for Transportation
Research and Education at North Carolina State University compared
“before” and “after” red-light camera intersection data and found
right-angle crashes dropped by 42 percent, rear-end crashes dropped by
25 percent and total accidents dropped by 22 percent. ([20])
In the state of Victoria, Australia,
widespread and increased use of speed cameras has given rise to public
criticism over whether the collection of over $400 million in speed
camera revenue during the 2003-04 financial year raises questions of
fairness and equity. With drivers being fined for speeding at only a
few km/h above the speed limit and receiving the infringement notice up
to months later, many have questioned whether there may be education
and enforcement measures available that place less of an imposition on
motorists.
References
- ^ "Home
Office announces publication of PA Consulting Group report on Automatic
Number Plate Recognition systems being piloted in 23 UK police forces", PA Consulting Group, 02 November 2004. Retrieved on 2007-09-12.
- ^ San Diego Court Ruling, 2001.
- ^ 'Say Cheese Speeders: Pasadena to Test Photo Radar' by Ashley Dunn in The Los Angeles Times, September 17, 1987
- ^ 'Photocop didn't play in Peoria', by Wayne Baker in The Chicago Tribune, March 21, 1991
- ^ Section
1111-a (Owner liability for failure of operator to comply with
traffic-control indications) of the Vehicle and Traffic Law permits red light cameras in each city with a population of one million or more. It will expire on December 1, 2009 if not renewed then.
- ^ E-ZPass FAQ, E-ZPass New York Service Center
- ^ New York State Assembly Bill Summary - A09877
- ^ cite news|url=http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/news.html?in_article_id=410539&in_page_id=1770|title=Drivers can avoid speeding tickets...by changing lanes|author=Ray Massey|publisher=Daily Mail|date=October 15, 2006}}
- ^ State of California vs John Allen, et al, [1] .
- ^ Template:Cite url=http://www.highwayrobbery.net/redlightcamsticket.htm
- ^ Stone, Mervyn (2004). Adjudication of the Radio 4 Today Programme Speed Tribunal. Technical Report UCL 245.
- ^ David Robinson, Richard Campbell. Contributory factors to road accidents. Road Casualties Great Britain: 2005. UK Department for Transport.
- ^ Are mobile speed cameras effective? A controlled before and after study by S M Christie, R A Lyons, F D Dunstan and S J Jones in Injury Prevention, vol 9 pages 302-306 (2003)
- ^ Mike Gill, Michael J Goldacre, David G R Yeates (2006-06-23). "Changes in safety on England’s roads: analysis of hospital statistics". British Medical Journal.
- ^ Heather Ward, Ronan Lyons, Roselle Thoreau (June 2006). "Road Safety Research Report No. 69: Under-reporting of Road Casualties – Phase 1". UK Department for Transport.
- ^ [2]
- ^ http://www.motorists.org/photoenforce/home/red-light-camera-citations-down/
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