Red-Light Cameras Could Nab Speeders Under Proposed Oregon Law

By Chris Lehman (OPB)
Salem, Oregon April 29, 2017 1:15 a.m.

Red-light cameras in Oregon could soon be nabbing drivers for speeding, too. The Oregon House could vote as soon as Monday on a bill allowing cities to use the cameras to issue speeding tickets.

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The proposed bill would allow Oregon cities to use red-light cameras to issue speeding tickets.

The proposed bill would allow Oregon cities to use red-light cameras to issue speeding tickets.

Kristin / Flickr

The measure would only allow speeding tickets to be issued if a driver is going at least 11 mph over the limit. If a driver is going at least 21 mph over the speed limit and runs a red light, they could get ticketed for both offenses.

The change could result in tens of thousands of new speeding tickets issued each year in Oregon. In the Portland suburb of Beaverton, for example, legislative analysts say the city could hand out as many as 30,000 tickets in the first year. Other cities that are ready to issue speeding tickets through red-light cameras include Portland, Medford and Sherwood. Four other cities could bring the technology online by 2019.

No one testified against the measure when it came before two different legislative committees.

The cameras currently take photos of drivers who enter an intersection after the light turns red. Many of the cameras are equipped with technology that allows them to measure the time it takes a vehicle to travel between two fixed points. The cameras can then use that information to determine if a vehicle is speeding.

According to the Statesman Journal, red-light cameras in Salem are not equipped to measure the speed of vehicles traveling through an intersection, and officials there told the paper the technology is not currently being considered.

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