Skip to main content

Speed camera law signed for six California cities

Enforcement pilots can start in LA, San Jose, Oakland, Glendale, Long Beach & San Francisco
By Adam Hill October 19, 2023 Read time: 2 mins
Oakland freeways (© Wirestock | Dreamstime.com)

Automated speed cameras can now be deployed in six Californian cities in a bid to curb dangerous driving.

State governor Gavin Newsom has signed into law a bill which means the cities of Los Angeles, San Jose, Oakland, Glendale and Long Beach, and the city and county of San Francisco, can now establish pilot speed enforcement programmes.

California's legislature acknowledged that speed "is a major factor in traffic collisions that result in fatalities or injuries" and that "traditional enforcement methods have had a well-documented disparate impact on communities of colour, and implicit or explicit racial bias in police traffic stops puts drivers of colour at risk".

Numerous speed safety system programmes in other states and cities "have proven successful in reducing speeding and addressing traffic safety concerns", it continues.

A 2017 National Transportation Safety Board study found these programmes "offered significant safety improvements in the forms of reduction in mean speeds, reduction in the likelihood of speeding more than 10 miles per hour over the posted speed limit, and reduction in the likelihood that a crash involved a severe injury or fatality". 

Such an approach "can advance equity by improving reliability and fairness in traffic enforcement while making speeding enforcement more predictable, effective, and broadly implemented, all of which helps change driver behaviour".

Warning notices - rather than fines - will be issued for the first 60 days of any programme in California and there are guidelines on the storage and use of data from the schemes.

Related Content

  • Speeding the recovery of stranded commercial vehicles is paying dividends in Georgia
    April 9, 2014
    Delcan’s Cheryl-Marie Hansberger details how Georgia’s Towing and Recovery Incentive Program (TRIP) has improved road safety and helped to reduce traffic congestion in the metro Atlanta region. By 2008, steady increases in population had led the Texas Transportation Institute to declare Atlanta, Georgia to be the third most congested city in the US. In an effort to increase road user safety and mitigate the effects of traffic, the Georgia Department of Transportation (GDOT) and its local partners have imple
  • Europe’s road safety record suffers as austerity bites hard, traffic police chiefs are told at TISPOL 2017
    March 7, 2018
    Europe’s leading traffic police chiefs are struggling with the challenge of how best to manage the region’s road network in an era of austerity. Things are changing fast, and not for the better, reports Geoff Hadwick. Europe’s road safety record is under threat. Police budgets are being slashed, staff numbers are falling and a long-term trend towards ever-fewer road deaths has ground to a halt. The line on the graph has flat-lined. Does Europe’s road network face a far more dangerous future? Lower and
  • Europe’s road safety record suffers as austerity bites hard, say traffic police chiefs
    March 7, 2018
    Europe’s leading traffic police chiefs are struggling with the challenge of how best to manage the region’s road network in an era of austerity. Things are changing fast, and not for the better, reports Geoff Hadwick. Europe’s road safety record is under threat. Police budgets are being slashed, staff numbers are falling and a long-term trend towards ever-fewer road deaths has ground to a halt. The line on the graph has flat-lined. Does Europe’s road network face a far more dangerous future? Lower and
  • Iteris wins two contracts to improve road safety in California
    May 7, 2019
    Iteris is to provide design and operations services to traffic management centres (TMCs) in a bid to improve road safety in the greater Los Angeles area. The contracts, in the cities of Inglewood and Glendale, total more than $1 million, and support the cities’ stated goals of ingesting data from Internet of Things (IoT) devices into central traffic operations hubs to better anticipate traffic-related issues. In Inglewood, Iteris will design its new main TMC and related traffic management operations s