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

  • New system expedites border crossings
    October 28, 2016
    Enforcing border controls can create long queues for travellers, David Crawford looks at potential solutions. Long delays at border crossings in both North America and Europe have sparked the development of new queue visualisation and management technologies that are cutting hours, even days, off international passenger and freight journeys. At the westernmost end of the 2,019km (1,250 mile) Mexico–US frontier, two parallel crossings between Tijuana, in the former country, and the border city of San Diego,
  • IAM RoadSmart calls for joined up thinking on road safety
    October 12, 2016
    Action is needed from across government departments to reverse the trend of flat-lining road deaths, according to new research from UK road safety charity IAM RoadSmart, which says reducing these deaths would in turn offer a large saving to the public purse. The new report, Evaluating the costs of incidents from the public sector perspective, is the first attempt to update the formula for death and injury cost figures since the 1990s. It is also the first time anyone has highlighted the costs to the publ
  • Wi-Fi win-win for mass transit
    October 31, 2014
    David Crawford explores passenger and operator benefits of on-board Wi-Fi Urban commuters’ growing demand for continuous – and reliable - internet connectivity is spurring network operators into the rapid installation of high-grade Wi-Fi access on their surface and underground networks, as well as in their stations. Such moves are often a key part of strategies to maintain and increase ridership levels.
  • US incident management needs national standardisation
    January 26, 2012
    I-95 Corridor Coalition's Tom Martin discusses the state of the art in incident management and what visitors to this year's ITS World Congress can expect of the first ever Emergency Responder-Incident Management Day. Developments in incident management are driven in the main by need. A bald statement, and one which holds no surprises, it nevertheless quantifies the evolutionary process within the I-95 Corridor Coalition over the last decade and more. Spread over 16 states from Maine to Florida, the Coalitio