Time to clean house on these intrusions to privacy and overzealous cities bent on ripping more money from our pockets (ie, a hidden tax). Next up, hopefully, speed traps.

Steubenville, Ohio Voters Overwhelmingly Reject Speed Cameras

An overwhelming majority of voters in Steubenville, Ohio rejected the city’s speed camera program yesterday in a referendum on whether the city ordinance authorizing the program should stand. With all precincts reporting, 76.2 percent of voters said “no.”

The program began last year issuing nearly 7000 tickets worth $85 each to motorists driving as little as 5 MPH over the speed limit. It would have generated nearly $600,000 in revenue until Jefferson County Court of Common Pleas Judge David E. Henderson struck down the city ordinance as illegal in March. Because the city is bound by contract to continue the services of German camera operator Traffipax, regardless of the program’s legality, it defied the judge’s order and reinstated an essentially identical ordinance to continue issuing citations.

Tuesday’s vote puts an end to the traffic cameras and serves as a victory for attorney Gary Stern who won a class action lawsuit to return the money that had been illegally collected from motorists. He also gathered enough signatures to put the speed camera question to a vote of the people. The public has never voted in favor of photo enforcement. Between 1991 and 1997, voters turned out in Batavia, Illinois; Peoria, Arizona and Anchorage, Alaska to reject photo radar.



  1. Daniel says:

    Quoting #3

    “With enough technology, no one is above the law”.

    Yes #3, and we’ll all live like ROBOTS right? you’d love that huh?

    WAKE UP AMRERICA!!! With a solution comes a problem aways! Make sure your solution doesn’t cause a BIGGER problem some where else!

    This is my opinion about the cameras. If they are to be there, don’t change the speed limit, change the limit before it takes the picture. Right now in arizona is 11 miles over. Change it to what ever suits the people.


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