Speed camera pilot launching in Paradise and Mount Pearl after years of planning - Action News
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Speed camera pilot launching in Paradise and Mount Pearl after years of planning

Speeders will soon be getting letters in the mail, after a long process including legislative changes and a lengthy list of stakeholders.

No tickets will be issued during pilot phase, but N.L. intends to expand program

A camera on a post in front of the sky and sun.
Enforcement cameras will soon be installed in some areas of Paradise and Mount Pearl, with the goal of cutting down on speeding. (Buntola Nou/CBC)

Paradise and Mount Pearl will becomethe first towns in Newfoundland and Labrador to crack down on speeding drivers with the use of cameras.

The two northeast Avalon municipalities are the first to sign on to the province's pilot project, which has been several years in the making.

The cameras will be installed in multiple locations across Mount Pearl and Paradise by June 1.

"There's going to be signs alerting people there is a camera," said Sarah Stoodley, minister of digital government and Service N.L. "We're trying to reduce speeds. That is the ultimate goal. We're not trying to trick people."

No drivers will be ticketed during the pilot program. Instead, they'll be given a warning in the mail. The municipalities, along with the provincial government,will be collecting data from the pilot to help guide the eventual rollout of speed cameras across the province.

"As we build out more of a robust, automated system, we really need some of this data," Stoodley said. "So this is really the most efficient way for us to get that data."

A white woman with brown hair wearing a blue blazer and a black t-shirt.
Sarah Stoodley is the minister responsible for digital government and Service N.L. (Curtis Hicks/CBC)

Paradise Mayor Dan Bobbett said the cameras are welcomed technology in his town, where speeding is one of the top concerns he hears from residents.

Bobbetthas been advocating for speed cameras since he was first elected mayor in 2013. He put forward a resolution at the Municipalities Newfoundland and Labrador annual symposium asking the province to amend legislation to allow speed cameras to be installed provincewide.

He was far from alone.

A white, bald man in a checkered shirt and a dark-coloured jacket. He's standing at a microphone.
Paradise Mayor Dan Bobbett says he's heard concerns about speeding since before he became mayor in 2013. He was one of the municipal leaders pushing the province to allow towns to implement speed cameras. (Malone Mullin/CBC)

The issue came up during provincial consultations on regulatory changes to automobile insurance in 2017 and 2018, with members of the public, the insurance industryand police asking the province to allow towns to install enforcement cameras.

Amendments were made to the Highway Traffic Actin the fall of 2019, but Stoodley said it took a long time to get to a place where they could begin installing cameras. The process involved multiple government departments, the Royal Newfoundland Constabulary, the RCMP and municipalities working together.

Move welcomed by Mount Pearl

The province's second-largest city is also enthused to be joining the pilot program, with hopes it will make residents safer in the immediate and longer term.

"I was elected 14 years ago, and I've heard it knocking on the doors in every election since," said Mayor Dave Aker.

"We've been reluctant to just continue to do things the old way. This is a great initiative using technology. It's innovative from the provincial perspective, but we see this all over the world."

A man wearing a dress shirt and black suit jacket smiles to the left of the camera.
Dave Aker, mayor of Mount Pearl, says speeding is one of the top concerns in his city. (Mark Quinn/CBC)

Most provinces already use enforcement cameras for speeding, and major cities areraking in millions of dollars in revenue. Toronto made $34 million on 560,000 violations in the first two years of its program, which began in 2020. In Ottawa, the local government had to spend $2 million on a new processing centre just to handle the fines it was sending out from the enforcement cameras.

Stoodley said the move is not about making moneybut slowing down drivers in problem areas.

"We know that speed cameras reduce speeds 30 to 50 per cent," she said. "They reduce accidents, serious injuries and save lives."

Read more from CBC Newfoundland and Labrador

With files from Henrike Wilhelm