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Barbara Didrichsen's avatar

Ohio also makes the use of speed cameras difficult. (My city's charter also includes a ban on their use. Opposition from the NAACP has been a factor in not overturning it.)

I understand Dublin, a Columbus bedroom community, has a workaround: they send violators a letter detailing their infraction and using it as a teachable moment. No fines levied.

From an article about Ohio's latest restrictions, enacted in 2025:

"Ohio counties and townships will no longer be allowed to operate traffic-camera programs, under Senate-added language to the transportation budget.

"It’s state lawmakers’ latest salvo in their years-long effort to rein in the use of traffic cameras, once used by dozens of local governments around the state to catch and ticket motorists for violations such as speeding or running a red light.

"Use of traffic cameras in Ohio has particularly dropped off since the legislature passed a 2015 law forbidding local authorities from issuing traffic-camera tickets unless a law-enforcement officer is stationed near each camera.

"Nine counties deduct money from their share of state funding for local governments to offset revenue from traffic-cameras fines, according to the association: Brown, Columbiana, Cuyahoga, Franklin, Huron, Lucas, Montgomery, Summit, and Trumbull counties. However, counties also have to make such deductions if cities or other local governments within them operate camera programs."

yeshuap's avatar

Every argument about getting people to slow down is that dril tweet "sure drunk driving kills people, but also it helps a lot of people get to work on time, so who's to say if it's good or bad" ad nauseum.

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