Based on the fine rates from GTA - each camera needs to catch 6 people a day to break even (about $120 a ticket).
At first it’ll be a great source of revenue but people will learn and slow down - then the ROI will be questionable…
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Based on the fine rates from GTA - each camera needs to catch 6 people a day to break even (about $120 a ticket).
At first it’ll be a great source of revenue but people will learn and slow down - then the ROI will be questionable…
Well, the idea is to make the roads safer -- not turn a profit. If people stop speeding so much, they can always take them down again. 6 a day seems like a very achievable number for a long time though.
If the streets are safer for it, then its a worthwhile investment. Especially if you consider the alternative of enforcement would be hiring another police officer, which undoubtably would cost more and be limited in their ability to catch every person speeding. Suppose an argument could be made to say these cameras are taking police officer's jobs, but frankly I think traffic enforcement should be below them, and let them focus on more real crimes going on.
Does that include that fines are doubled in community safety zones (the areas these cameras will target)?
Yes as ours are around schools.