speed cameras
Coverage of speed cameras in the Nexus archive.
- Aurora drivers could be owed refunds if speed cameras lawsuit succeeds
A lawsuit claims a 2023 state law requires municipalities using speed cameras to provide drivers 45 days from receiving a citation to respond. If successful, Aurora drivers may be eligible for refunds related to these citations.
- Heads up: speed cameras activated on NYC bridges, tunnels
Speed cameras were activated on Wednesday in construction zones on New York City bridges and tunnels operated by the MTA. The cameras will record vehicles exceeding the posted speed limit by more than 10 mph.
- Speed cameras coming to NYC work zones on June 30
Speed cameras will be installed in NYC work zones starting June 30. Anthony Carlo is reporting on the implementation of these speed cameras.
- Speed cameras to be active next week in I-25, Highway 50 construction zone
The Colorado Department of Transportation (CDOT) will activate speed cameras in a construction zone on I-25 between 29th and 13th Streets in Pueblo starting next Tuesday. For 30 days, speeding drivers will receive warnings instead of tickets, after which fines of $75 will apply without affecting driving records.
- Five deaths on DKI Highway prompt emergency safety measures
Five people died on Daniel K. Inouye Highway in May and June, prompting the Department of Transportation to implement emergency safety measures such as installing high-friction road surfaces, reviewing passing zones, and considering speed cameras, alongside increased enforcement and citations.
- Oakland speed cameras issue 82,000 tickets in first 40 days of controversial program
Oakland's speed cameras issued 82,000 tickets in the first 40 days of a controversial program. The cameras were installed along the city's High-Injury Network, streets responsible for most severe crashes.
- Will cameras actually curb speeding in L.A.? San Francisco offers a clue
San Francisco reported an 80% reduction in excessive speeding after one year of implementing speed cameras at 33 locations, suggesting potential effectiveness for similar measures in Los Angeles.