Skip to main content

Redflex upgrades LA's automated enforcement

Halo 2 system comprises radar, flash, cameras and computer in one enclosure
By Ben Spencer September 4, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
Halo 2: 'The certainty of enforcement drives compliance,' says Redflex CEO Mark Talbot

Redflex Traffic Systems is upgrading 113 automated enforcement camera sites throughout Los Angeles to help improve safety at bus and rail crossings. 

Mark Talbot, group CEO of Redflex, says: “Imagine the consequences of a crash between a bus and a car, or a train and a car. Reducing or possibly even eliminating those incursions is vitally important.”

Redflex says the initiative is part of a $25.4 million agreement with the Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority to improve automated enforcement system technologies and back office management services over eight years.

Redflex will provide its Halo 2 system, a single pole solution comprising radar, flash, cameras and computer in a single enclosure. The Halo radar can track 256 objects simultaneously with reliable lane discrimination, the company adds.

As part of the deal, it will also deploy the Alcyon back office software with 45-megapixel cameras. 

Redflex claims its Alcyon processing platform enables users to import and process incidents via automated manual processes, removing the need to manage separate systems. 

“The certainty of enforcement drives compliance,” Talbot continues. “It’s an unarguable fact that when cameras are in place, violations go down and dangerous or bad driving behaviour changes.”

It is a theme that Talbot touched on during a recent interview with ITS International.

According to Redflex, the LA system is environmentally friendly with a lower power draw that also uses LED flashes where possible. 

Once fully upgraded, the automated enforcement systems will be active at several Metro light rail network and bus intersections. 

Redflex is carrying out the upgrade in collaboration with Morgner Construction Management.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • The benefits of Lidar
    March 21, 2022

    While Lidar is gaining ground in the ITS industry, it has not yet reached the level of mass adoption where it shows up frequently in requests for proposals (RFPs) from cities and DoTs.

  • Traffic Group: ‘Daily commute may never be the same’
    May 22, 2020
    The pandemic has taught us that our ideas about travel might need a rethink - Wes Guckert suggests a few ways in which change is coming
  • Saving the smartphone zombies from themselves
    October 15, 2020
    As roads – particularly in cities – become busier, companies are fielding a steady trickle of products to keep pedestrians safe and vehicles flowing
  • Xerox video enforcement deters stopped-bus overtaking
    November 7, 2012
    High resolution cameras, video motion detection and modems are being fitted to school buses in Maryland, as part of a system designed to enforce and deter stopped-bus overtaking violations. A new video enforcement system is being installed to record drivers illegally overtaking school buses in Frederick County, Maryland. It is against the law to overtake a parked school bus that is loading or unloading students, yet a 2011 survey for the Maryland Department of Education found 7,000 cases of drivers illegall