Fleeced wrote:
I agree with you on the traffic light cameras - generally don't have a problem with these, provided that the fine is waived for any emergeny-related red light running.
Which they aren't, as we hear on countless occasions. And even if they
are you don't know this at the time, so if you are at a red light and an ambulance comes steaming up behind do you or don't you sneak over the line to let him through? If your answer is "yes" then try repeating the question after first imagining you already have 9 points...
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Yellow box cameras are are ok provided that the yellow box is reasonable. There was one in Holborn that Camden had to modify because it was on a corner and you couldn't see the exit from the entry?!?! And I saw a box junction the other day with a pelican crossing immediately after it. What the hell are you supposed to do if the lights change while you're halfway across? Jump the lights or stop in the box?
As for bus lanes, it's strange, but I quite like them. They get me to work quickly and I enjoy using the part-time ones to jump the queues of idiots too dense to read the times of operation on the blue signs.
Enforcing yellow boxes and bus lanes isn't a safety issue but purely a congestion issue, so IMHO the penalty for driving in them shouldn't involve adding points to people's licences. If that were the case then I don't suppose cameras monitoring them would be much different to high street CCTV, but as it stands I can't get very comfortable with the idea of people gaining penalty points on their licences merely for holding the traffic up for a few seconds.
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I'd be up for anti-tailgate cameras if they worked. I'm sure there must be some technical solution to the difficulties highlighted.
To support "tailgating cameras" you have to also support speed cameras generally. Here's why:
In order to decide whether a car is following another too closely you need to measure not only the distance, but the speed as well - what's "too close" at 50mph is fine at 20mph etc.
So for a camera to be "measuring" tailgating it inherently needs to be measuring the speeds of the vehicles involved. Now if the powers that be go to all the expense of putting these things up, and then discover that the speed reading for a passing vehicle just happens to be in excess of the posted limit then do we reasonably expect they are going to turn a blind eye? I don't.
So if you don't support speed cameras (which I don't) then in the real world you can't support tailgating cameras either, as the two are effectively synonymous.
(Which is quite apart from the other obvious problems such as people pulling into your path or "brake testing" you etc).