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Camera monitoring, paired with driver coaching, was found to reduce frequency of harsh braking events by 17 percent and over-speeding events by 34 percent among heavy goods vehicle drivers.

Methodology The objective was to understand how frequently individual incidents related to risky driving behavior occur: without camera monitoring and without any coaching; after camera installation…
Content type
Date Posted
10/29/2020
Taxonomy (ARC-IT) Freight Administration (CVO02)

The installation and operational costs for 599 speed cameras (mobile and fixed) deployed during a two-year pilot study in the United Kingdom totaled approximately £21 million.

Content references source material no longer available at its original location.
In 1998, the United Kingdom's Department for Transport (DfT) adopted a policy to allow local partnerships to recover the cost of implementing and operating their speed and red-light enforcement…
Content type
Made Public Date
11/05/2004

Seventy (70) percent of survey respondents in Great Britain thought that automated speed and red-light enforcement cameras were a useful way to reduce accidents and save lives.

Content references source material no longer available at its original location.
FINDINGSFifteen (15) months after the pilot project began, 2000 people from across the country were surveyed. The following results were presented in the report:Seventy (70) percent of people…
Content type
Date Posted
07/25/2003

Automated speed and red-light enforcement reduced the percentage of vehicles exceeding the speed limit by 58 percent, the number of persons killed or seriously injured by 4 to 65 percent, and the personal injury accident rate by 6 percent.

Content references source material no longer available at its original location.
FINDINGSTo establish a baseline for comparison and account for preexisting trends, accident and injury rates were tracked for 13 quarters prior to deployment. The table below outlines the impacts of…
Content type
Date Posted
07/25/2003