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Wednesday, November 05, 2014

Voters in Three More States Reject Photo Enforcement

Voters in four US jurisdictions had the opportunity to vote on red light or speed cameras yesterday, and voters rejected the cameras. From TheNewspaper.com:
Voters in four jurisdictions were emphatic Tuesday in sending the message to local politicians that they do not want speed cameras or red light cameras in their community. By margins of over 70 percent, residents of Cleveland and Maple Heights, Ohio; Sierra Vista, Arizona (with 26 percent of votes tallied); and St. Charles County, Missouri voted to add themselves to the growing list of cities and counties that have outlawed photo ticketing."After four-and-a-half years we've finally done it," initiative organizer Jason Sonenshein told TheNewspaper. "It's great to have finally accomplished our goal."
With the vote was 77.5 percent in favor of the ban, Sonenshein expressed surprise at how late in the election campaign that Xerox, the city's private camera vendor, began pouring money into saving the lucrative program. Local radio and television advertisements featured former Senator George Voinovich praising cameras on Xerox's behalf. At the end of the night, it turned out not to matter with late results matching the sentiment of the early returns.
Activists in nearby Maple Heights also spent their time and effort with street-corner protests to bring awareness to the ballot initiative, not having the funding for a slick advertising campaign like the camera industry does.
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4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Its a start..

Anonymous said...

Take it to court and ask to review the evidence that it was you driving, they can't and the judge will dismiss the case.

Anonymous said...

I tape measured my ticket and took the photos to court. Also, the 2nd photo was missing a piece of info that nullified it.

Walked in a half hour.

And, the judge is no fan of the cams, either.

Time to sign the petition this time around.

Put it on OUR ballot!

Anonymous said...

It takes a MDPetitions proper petition to bring this to the next ballot, folks. Signed by you, and generated and walked by you. ALL of you!

You and all your email contacts need to do it.

Please, do.