Skip to main content

Last call for Canberra drivers

Australian capital aims to crack down on motorists using their phones at the wheel
By Alan Dron November 23, 2022 Read time: 2 mins
Research shows that taking your eyes off the road for more than two seconds doubles the risk of a crash

Drivers using mobile phones while at the wheel can have lethal effects.  

Authorities in the Australian Capital Territory (ACT) are now moving to stamp out the practice, selecting Acusensus Australia to supply and operate cameras aimed at detecting drivers who are texting or chatting rather than concentrating on the road ahead.

“Research shows that taking your eyes off the road for more than two seconds doubles the risk of a crash, with mobile phones too often being the source of that distraction,” said minister for transport and city services, Chris Steel.

“In the past five financial years, ACT Policing has issued an average of 911 infringements and 260 cautions for using a mobile device when driving. The actual rate of offending is likely to be much higher.”

Acusensus already supplies this equipment to Queensland and New South Wales. 

The cameras will be installed next year and will operate day and night, in all weather conditions.

Two fixed cameras will be located on Canberra’s Hindmarsh Drive and Gungahlin Drive, while three mobile cameras will be moved across various sites in the city.

Images detecting a potential offence will be automatically pixelated and cropped to only show a view of the driver. These will be reviewed by an artificial intelligence system, then a human operator before an infringement notice decision is made.

“Mobile phone use is a major source of road casualties,” noted Acusensus’s founder and managing director, Alexander Jannink.

“Our camera enforcement programmes in other states are leading the way in changing driver behaviour and reducing road trauma, and I fully expect to see the same positive outcomes in the ACT.” 

Warning notices will initially be issued, with infringement notices starting from October 2023.

The ACT Government will undertake an awareness campaign across TV, digital, radio and out-of-home advertising, to ensure drivers know that holding a phone while driving is now a high-risk activity in more ways than one.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • It’s time to stop and think about in-car HMIs
    August 30, 2019
    The sophistication of automotive human machine interfaces (HMIs) is easy to underestimate.
  • Xerox counts on machine vision for high occupancy enforcement
    October 29, 2014
    Machine vision techniques can provide solutions to some of the traffic planners most enduring problems With a high proportion of cars being occupied by the driver alone, one of the easiest, most environmentally friendly and cheapest methods of reducing congestion is to encourage more people to travel in each vehicle. So to persuade people to share rides, high occupancy lanes were devised to prioritise vehicles with (typically) three of more people on board and in some areas these vehicles are exempt from
  • Getting to the point
    September 4, 2018
    Cars are starting to learn to understand the language of pointing – something that our closest relative, the chimpanzee, cannot do. And such image recognition technology has profound mobility implications, says Nils Lenke Pointing at objects – be it with language, using gaze, gestures or eyes only – is a very human ability. However, recent advances in technology have enabled smart, multimodal assistants - including those found in cars - to action similar pointing capabilities and replicate these human qual
  • The benefits of combining enforcement and traffic management
    February 27, 2013
    Jason Barnes considers how combining enforcement equipment with other traffic management technologies might benefit our future – if only the will were really in place to do so. During the ITS World Congress in Vienna in October last year, Navtech Radar and Vysion­ics ITS announced a strategic partnership that would combine the expertise of Navtech in millimetre-wave wide-area surveillance technology with Vysionics’ machine vision-based automatic number plate recognition (ANPR) and average speed measurement