The installations of such cameras are to promote traffic and pedestrian safety.
America Hasn’t Seen a Spike in Traffic Deaths This Bad in 50 Years. Data should be a call to action. @streetsblogusa https://t.co/5pt8lnOhQq pic.twitter.com/FWcyfpNdf6
— Vision Zero Network (@Visionzeronet) October 12, 2017
KVAL reports that even if the light is green the cameras will be watching. Portland, Salem and Albany and a few other cities already have those cameras in place; however, Eugene and Springfield do not.
Eugene has not yet completely ruled out the possibility of installing these traffic cameras.
Matt Rodrigues, a traffic engineer with the City of Eugene, commented, “Where we have a problem with crashes related to that, related to people driving through red lights and people speeding.”
“They’ve been able to reduce high-end speeding, which is people going 10 miles per hour or more over the posted speed limit, by 90 percent,” Rodrigues explained.
On the contrary Lt. Scott McKee, with the Springfield Police, explained, “Traffic cameras and that sort of surveillance is not popular with the public.” McKee said Springfield Police is not opposed to this new technology, but they think “old school” methods still work best.
“We deploy our staff to those areas and do actual traffic enforcement,” he said.
He also claims that if tickets are mailed to people’s houses long after the traffic offense, it does not allow officers to use “essential discretion.”
A proposal titled Vision Zero has been submitted to the Eugene City Council advocating for the installation of traffic cameras throughout Eugene.
Tech & data combo are helping #VisionZero cities make zero traffic deaths a reality, tracking dangerous behaviors https://t.co/yLFTk6Fh9e pic.twitter.com/1DclO1JyjR
— Vision Zero Network (@Visionzeronet) October 14, 2017
If the proposal is approved, the cameras are planned to be up and running within 2 years.