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Toronto wants more speed cameras, but advocates say it's not enough to curb traffic deaths

The citys Infrastructure and Environment Committee will meet Tuesday to discuss bringing in 25 additional photo radar cameras by 2023. In August, SickKids published a report that showed speeds were effectively reduced in the presence of these cameras.

City committee to meet Tuesday to discuss bringing in 25 new cameras by 2023

A silver automated speed camera sits on a Toronto street.
The City of Toronto is looking to roll out an additional 25 automated speed cameras around as part of its Vision Zero program, which aims to eliminate fatalities and serious injuries on city streets. (CBC)

Toronto is looking to roll out 25 new photo radar cameras around the city to help curb the number of fatalities and serious injuries, but critics say much more needs to be done to make city streets as safe as they can be.

In 2020, the city installed 50 of the automated cameras, with two in each ward thatget moved to a new location every three to six months.

Research from the Hospital for Sick Children shows there has been a reduction in speeds in areas where the cameras havebeen installed. These results have driven the push for even more cameras, Coun.Mike Layton told CBC News.

"[We want] to make sure we're having the same positive impact on the safety of our roads at other locations," he said. "Put simply: It works, do more."

In 2021 alone, 58 peopledied after collisions on Toronto's streets.The cameras are just one part of the city's Vision Zero plan, a strategy that aims to reduce thenumber of traffic-related deaths to zero. The Infrastructure and Environment Committee will meet to discuss the new cameras on Tuesday. If approved, they will be installed in strategic locations,determined by traffic data,around the city starting in 2023.

Coun. Mike Layton says research from the Hospital for Sick Children, which shows a reduction in speeding in areas where the photo radar cameras were deployed, is a big reason for the push to install more of the devices. (John Lesavage/CBC News)

Layton said he'd like to see the rollout happen sooner, but it's beendelayed tocoincide with the introduction of anewautomated system that will streamline the lengthy paperwork process forprovincial enforcement officers and prevent a backlog in the court system.

Research shows a positive impact

SickKids researchers, who looked at the first year of the photo radar program, presented their preliminary findings in August 2021. They found an overall reduction in speeding, as well as a reduction in excess speeds for cars that were found travelling fasterthan the legallimit.

For instance, the number of speeding vehicles in 40 km/h zones dropped from 49 per cent to 28, according to a city news release at thetime. Similarly, 30 km/h zones saw a drop from 55 per cent to 44.

The report also indicated that average excess speed was reduced by 12 km/h in 40 km/hr zones and by threekm/h in 30 km/h zones.

The city also reported a total of 227,322 speeding tickets issued by the cameras in that first-year period.

But Layton wants to make it clear that this isn't about the city making a profit. It's about public safety.

"The fines are essentially paying for the cameras," he said. "The money is the incentive for people to stop practising dangerous behaviour like speeding."

Photo radar isn't a 'golden ticket,' expert says

While some advocates welcome the new cameras, they also want moredone to meet the city's Vision Zero goal sooner.

Matti Siemiatycki, director of the University of Toronto's Infrastructure Institute, said "photo radar in and of itself will not be the golden ticket that leads us to a Vision Zero."

"Twenty-five cameras is not going to be the policy intervention that takes us all the way there."

Siemiatycki argued for a more concentrated plan of action, rather than the incremental changes that have historically been implemented by the city.

For the Avenue Road Safety Coalition's Albert Koehl, one of those concentrated measures involves completely rethinking the way Toronto's roads are laid out and built.

"We can put ... speed cameras up across the city," he said. "But in the longer term, what we really need is a road redesign."

His coalition has been calling for the city to reduce the number of traffic lanes on Avenue Road, from six to four. It's a strategy he'd like to see implemented on many of the city's busier streets.

Koehl noted the city has historically invested a lot of moneyin creating roads that were meant to move cars as quickly as possible, often at the expense of pedestrians' and cyclists' safety.

"Surely, if we can find $2 billion to rebuild the Gardiner Expressway, we can find some [money to redesign] roads, such as Parkside, such as Avenue Road, such as O'Connor, all places where people have been killed recently."