Skip to main content

Canadian authorities convinced of enforcement safety benefits

Cost-benefit analysis invariably finds highly in favour of speed and red light enforcement, particularly so in Edmonton in the Alberta province of Canada, where authorities need no convincing of the merits of road safety engineering. Justification of enforcement efforts on economic grounds has been reinforced this year, by a study of the costs and benefits of red light enforcement. New York-based economic research firm John Dunham & Associates carried out this latest analysis for American Traffic Solutions
November 28, 2012 Read time: 5 mins

Cost-benefit analysis invariably finds highly in favour of speed and red light enforcement, particularly so in Edmonton in the Alberta province of Canada, where authorities need no convincing of the merits of road safety engineering.

Justification of enforcement efforts on economic grounds has been reinforced this year, by a study of the costs and benefits of red light enforcement. New York-based economic research firm John Dunham & Associates carried out this latest analysis for American Traffic Solutions (ATS), with the aim of quantifying the benefits of red light enforcement for individual US cities. The results are conclusive in showing large scale savings as a result of reduced accidents, injury and loss of life, regardless of enforcement revenue.

But like in similar studies carried out in other parts of the world, the cost reductions have been calculated accumulatively from savings experienced by all affected by individual road accidents.

The benefits of reducing road fatalities for society at large are clearly enormous when all the disparate costs are added up, but the savings are generally far less for the operating or funding authority alone; unless, that is, revenue from enforcement is taken into account, and allowed to go directly back to that organisation to cover operating costs – or for further investment in road safety.

The business model promoted by ATS is predicated on a flat monthly fee per camera, funded from fines paid by violators. Highway authorities’ only costs are in initial staff time needed to set up the enforcement programme, which then becomes self-financing. ATS’ cost-benefit study has been carried out with the aim of showing communities how they can benefit from reduction of accidents, which, the company says, ought to be sufficient reason alone for red light enforcement.

Unequivocal backing

North of the US border, in the Canadian province of Alberta, CAN$32M has been collected by the City of Edmonton over the course of a single year as a result of a programme of speed and red light enforcement costing around $6M to operate per year. Elsewhere this might cause political difficulty by attracting accusations of enforcing in the name of profit, but in Edmonton the city’s executive has the unequivocal backing of its governing council.

“The public perception here is similar to elsewhere, with a small percentage of people not liking the speed and red light enforcement, but surveys have shown more than 80% are in favour of the initiative,” says executive director of the City of Edmonton’s Office of Traffic Safety, Gerry Shimko. “A big issue in Edmonton is the number of complaints of dangerous driving behaviour, so public support continues to grow. Another plus of the programme, for generating positive perceptions, is the fact that all of the revenue generated is ring fenced for going back into road safety projects.”

An impression of enforcement being pursued for the right reasons is reinforced by the city’s scientific approach to the problem of road safety, which has included the enlisting of road safety academics at Ryerson University in Toronto and the University of British Columbia in Vancouver. Revenue generated has been used to found and fund a chair in urban traffic safety within the faculty of civil and environmental engineering at the University of Alberta; and Edmonton will host its fifth annual International Urban Traffic Safety Conference in 2013, also funded by the city’s enforcement programme.

Political commitment

A political commitment is evident from efforts in Edmonton, driven in part by a ‘Mayor’s Task Force on Traffic Safety’. In 2007, the city established a new Office of Traffic Safety (OTS), which would be responsible for all road safety work, including evaluation, engineering, education and enforcement. Edmonton’s police service had been operating a limited enforcement programme, but was seeking to distance itself from being seen to fund services from speeding fines. OTS was handed responsibility for enforcement in 2009 and immediately set about expanding the programme within the city limits. ATS was the successful vendor awarded a contract for upgrading camera technology for enforcing red light and speed violations at 50 intersections – equipment that was fully installed and operational by the close of 2009.

Since then numbers of traffic collisions have been “coming down nicely”, Shimko says. There is still more than sufficient revenue being gathered for funding further road safety work, however. “The enforcement system has been designed to be self funding and relies on enough people exceeding limits or jumping red lights to fund ongoing safety work. Every year it seems we get another crop of speeders,” he says.

Reinvestment programme

Edmonton’s OTS has opted to keep operation of its enforcement regime in-house rather than outsourced to a private sector supplier. According to Shimko this allows the city to exploit its abilty to reduce cost and reinvest in further initiatives. The OTS is now a group of around 20 professionals analysing collision data and designing solutions where the numbers are high.

“We are now embarking on a programme of infrastructure improvements,” says Shimko. “We have identified some necessary engineering changes to right turns and collector roads between residential streets and freeways.”

So far Shimko’s team has demonstrated a reduction in collisions worth $203M to the City of Edmonton, over a period when the
city’s population has risen by 10% and the number of registered vehicles has increased by 21%. Shimko puts much of this success down to OTS’ scientific approach: “Problems elsewhere are usually down to insufficient data. We collect a lot of it and use a full empirical baysian methodology of statistical analysis for selecting sites to be treated. We also have leading edge academics helping so it’s difficult for anybody to say we’re doing any of this for the wrong reasons.”

Related Content

  • Asecap Days delves beneath the surface of tolling
    August 8, 2017
    Colin Sowman picks his highlights from Asecap’s 45th annual Study and Information Days in Paris. European tolling association Asecap holds annual Study & Information Days, provides delegates with updates on the latest moves and thinking in the tolling sector and is a key meeting place for concessionaires from 22 countries. The importance of road transport to the French economy was highlighted by the country’s director general of transport infrastructures, François Poupard, in the opening session. He told th
  • Calculating the cost of stellar solutions
    August 10, 2016
    The increasing availability and accuracy of global navigation satellite system (GNSS) is opening up low-cost options in many areas as David Crawford finds out. Boosting commercialisation of European global navigation satellite system (EGNSS) technologies for ITS initially depends heavily on demonstrating competitive and cost/benefit advantages obtainable from the deployment of EGNOS (the current European Geostationary Navigation Overlay Service), and ultimately the EU’s Galileo constellation (see box). So,
  • TRL: Cities must do more to help VRUs
    May 9, 2019
    UK cities must learn from the Netherlands and Denmark if active travel and increased safety for vulnerable road users are to co-exist, says TRL’s Marcus Jones Active travel’ refers to modes of transport in which physical effort is required to undertake purposeful journeys - for example, walking or cycling to school, work or the local shops, as well as walking and standing as part of accessing public transport. The benefits of replacing short car journeys with more active forms of transport are obvious. Act
  • South Africa's traffic management and enforcement gears up
    February 1, 2012
    Paul Vorster, CEO of ITS South Africa, takes a look at the national enforcement situation in the year when the country gears up to host the FIFA Soccer World Cup. There are four main drivers pushing the growth of ITS-related law enforcement within South Africa. These are: transport operations associated with hosting the FIFA Soccer World Cup 2010; traffic management linked to increasing congestion; the development of new public transport systems such as BRT; and vehicle and driver-related crime.