Speaking of Speed Cameras, there is something new for those installed on roads with low speed limits, which local administrations often abuse. While speed cameras can be a deterrent effective against speeding and help reduce accidents, from the other they come used improperly by local administrations to raise cash, creating inconvenience for motorists and fueling the feeling of injustice.
The abuse of speed cameras
It may be possible to abuse the speed camera when it is installed in non-hazardous areas, where the risk of accidents is low, such as on fast roads with wide carriageways and excellent visibility and very low speed limits. Speed camera abuse occurs even when the signage which must indicate the presence of speed cameras is barely visible or even absent, creating real traps for unaware motorists. The speed camera is abused, or illegitimately used, when it is not correctly calibrated, thus generating contestable illegitimate fines.
To stop the abuse of the speed camera came a decree to regulate the Speed Cameras signed by Ministry of Transportdriven by Matteo Salvini. This is an interministerial decree which also involves the ministries ofInterior and Infrastructurewith the aim of imposing stricter rules and detailed information about the detectors for prevent abuse by some Municipalities that use fines as a source of income. In total it consists of six articles And two attachments.
What the decree says about speed cameras
Decisions about the use of speed cameras will no longer be made independently by individual municipalities, but they will have to be coordinated with other bodies in the province and with the provincial administration to avoid duplication and overlap. Speed cameras can only be used where:
- High speed accident rate in the previous five years;
- Inability to immediately contest the violation;
- Speed of vehicles in transit on average exceeding the permitted limits.
They will not be deployed where speed limits are already low, such as in the city below 50 km/h or outside the city with a lower limit of at least 20km/h compared to the maximum established by the Highway Code for that type of road. For example, on main suburban areas (max 110 km/h), the speed camera will only be used if the limit is at least 90 km/h.
On cycle-pedestrian itineraries on extra-urban roads, the limit must not be less than 30 km/h.
There average speed it can only be monitored on motorways, main and secondary extra-urban roads, with a distance of at least 1 km between the entry and exit “portals”.. The distance between the speed limit sign and the speed camera must be at least one kilometre.
The distance between the speed limit sign and the speed camera must be at least 200 meters on urban roads and at least 75 meters on other roads. The minimum distance between two speed cameras must be at least 500 meters in urban areas and in border areas with extra-urban areas. There average speed it can only be checked on urban roads along stretches of at least 500 metres, with a distance of at least one kilometer between two sections under control.
Mobile speed camera stations
On extra-urban roads, mobile speed camera stations cannot be positioned where the speed limit is too low. Furthermore, they must only be used where the speed limit is no more than 20 km/h lower than the maximum established by the Code for that type of road. The distance between the speed limit sign and the speed camera must be at least 1 km. Between two consecutive devices, the distance must be at least 4km on highways, 3km on main extra-urban roads e 1 km on other roads.
The mobile speed camera stations on the urban streets according to the new rules they can only be used where the speed limit is not less than 50 km/h on urban roads, 50 km/h on urban neighborhood and local roads, 30 km/h on urban cycle roads and not lower at 30 km/h on cycle/pedestrian routes.
There must be a distance of at least between two consecutive speed cameras on the same road 1,000 meters on urban roads and 500 meters on neighborhood and local streets. The distance between the speed limit sign and the speed camera cannot be less than 200 meters on urban roads and others 75 meters on other roads.
Speed camera approval
On roads other than motorways, speed camera stations can only be placed in advance agreed planning at the Permanent Provincial Conference. The goal is to avoid duplications and superpositions, ensuring effective control of speed limits and avoiding multiple detections on the same stretch of road or in the same period. The conditions for installing speed cameras include a high level of speed-related accidentsthe impossibility of immediate protest, and an average speed of vehicles exceeding the permitted limits.
Municipalities and provinces will have to remove speed cameras that do not comply with the new rules within 12 months. The inspection costs must be documentable and analytical. Only the costs incurred for identifying the offender via public databases (the cost of which is minimal or practically nil) can be included in the report. From now on Expenses relating to the use of the equipment are not permitted nor subsequent costs such as legal assistance or debt collection. In summary, only postage costs can be considered.
The equipment can be acquired via leasing, fixed-rate rental, loaned by other public administrations or road concessionaires. Payment to the supplier must be proportionate to the cost or time of use of the equipment, without relation to the penalties assessed or collected.
The police force must manage and validate violations, while private individuals can carry out minor activities such as printing photographic documents and administrative management of reports.
Rules against the wild use of speed cameras
The objective of this reform on speed cameras is to eliminate wild fines, as also denounced by Fleximan. According to 2023 data, penalties for violating the Highway Code generated a increase in collections for Italian municipalitiesreaching beyond 1.53 billion euros, an increase of 6.4% compared to 2022 and 23.7% compared to 2019.
This represents a significant financial contribution for entities often in economic difficulty, which limits their investments in road infrastructure and on safety. In fact, according to data on fines in 2023, a large part of the proceeds from the latter is not used to comply with the obligations established by the Highway Code, but to finance other initiatives.
Although the Highway Code provides that the 50% of the proceeds of the fines is intended to raise awareness of road safety and that the proceeds deriving from speeding fines are reinvested in works to improve road infrastructure, a recent report ofAsaps and of theLorenzo Guarnieri Association highlights that Municipalities often allocate the proceeds of fines to other purposes.
For example, in 2022, the first 14 Italian cities by number of inhabitants they have collected overall 549 million eurosof which only a small part was allocated to road safety education.
Read also:
→ Bologna speed limit of 30 km/h
→ Speed limit 30 km/h, maximum and minimum
→ Fleximan the latest news
→ Read other related topics
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