Thursday, February 15, 2007

Watch for the eye in the sky


There are cameras everywhere this day and age but what are they watching anyway.
Safety is one thing but to watch to give tickets and pray on the weak when it is the system that is flawed is just plain wrong if you would like to know where these cameras and lights are go to www.motorists.org
PS this is a camera shot from a bus going to a park in Disney World. Is there any place that's safe from the eye in the sky. In the park is one thing but to give tickets to people who are visiting is another story please tell you stories we would love to hear

Thursday, January 25, 2007

Dont Get hit from behind

Becareful when stopping short on first sign of yellow You mabe struck from behind.This is happining more and more each and every day this is due to bad yellow light timing.

Saturday, January 6, 2007

Reveiw in Los Angles Times latimes.com

YOUR WHEELS
Fuzzing up the policing picture
A license-plate spray thwarts cameras set up to catch drivers running red lights.
But what of safety -- and the law?

By Jeanne Wright, Special to The Times - Jan 5 2005

A product that hides license plates from traffic-enforcement cameras at intersections may appeal to those frustrated by malfunctioning cameras but poses a major safety threat from those who hope to use it to slip through red lights.

For $30 a can, Photoblocker sprays on a high-gloss permanent reflective finish on a license plate.

"The glossy surface acts as a mirror to reflect a photo-radar flash back to the camera, overexposing the image," says Joe Scott, marketing director at PhantomPlate Inc., maker of the spray. As a result, the plate is unreadable and the driver avoids an expensive citation, usually in the hundreds of dollars.

Whether it's legal or not in California is unclear. LAPD spokesman Jack Richter says any product that makes a license plate unreadable is illegal. But CHP spokesman Tom Marshall says there has been no definitive ruling. "It's a sticky issue" that will have to be litigated or legislated, he says.

Legal or not, the product is sure to become a hot issue.

"I shouldn't be surprised that someone has come up with a product that actually helps people evade red-light cameras, ostensibly encouraging them to run red lights," says Candysse Miller, executive director of the Insurance Information Network of California.

"Why would anyone with a conscience encourage people to run red lights?" she asks. "What's next? A product to block security cameras at the corner 7-Eleven?"

The unnerving beauty of this product is that, according to its makers, there is no way you can spot a license plate that has been sprayed with the solution. Unlike covers that completely conceal the plate number and are illegal, the spray is invisible to the naked eye. Only the red-light camera would find the plate unreadable, Scott says.

The executive denies that his company's product encourages reckless driving. "We do not condone speeding or running red lights," he says. He argues that the spray is legal and that most drivers caught by the cameras did not intend to run the light. Domestic and international sales of Photoblocker have reached more than 250,000, he says.

It certainly doesn't take a rocket scientist to know how dangerous it is to blast through red lights with impunity. Police and others who see the carnage firsthand understand how serious a threat red-light runners are to others.

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration estimates that 1,000 people a year are killed and 50,000 injured in accidents involving running red lights. From 1999 to 2003, there were 4,846 fatal red-light-running crashes, with 5,340 deaths.

"Red-light running is unpardonable. It's right behind drunk driving, speed and lack of seat belt use in lives lost needlessly," says Harry Teter, executive director of the American Trauma Society. "People are in such a hurry, they are willing to take dangerous and unnecessary risks."

Do Photoblocker and similar products work? It depends on the type of traffic enforcement camera and how it's positioned, according to LAPD Sgt. Steven Foster, who heads the department's automated camera enforcement program.

So far, Foster says, the LAPD has not seen a rash of intersection photos with blocked-out license plates. "We see some occasional blurring," he says.

Motorists who oppose red-light-camera enforcement view it as intrusive. They often point to cases where drivers have been wrongly ticketed because of equipment malfunctions or human errors. Critics of red-light cameras contend cities install the cameras primarily to generate revenues.

"It's all about the revenues, not safety," Scott says. "Law-abiding citizens are being ticketed unjustly."

But the LAPD's Richter says he's appalled that a product would allow people to run red lights without being punished. People who are spending money on a spray to hide their license plate numbers "are going through a lot of effort to break the law. Why don't they save themselves the money and drive safely?"

Meanwhile, Scott says sales of Photoblocker skyrocketed during the holiday season.

"It's the perfect gift. It's permanent. It will last a lifetime," he says.

Of course if you're in the habit of running red lights, your life expectancy may not be all that long.

Jeanne Wright can be reached at jeanrite@aol.com

Friday, December 22, 2006

13 TH ANNUAL RED LIGHT GREEN LIGHT AWARDS

AAA New York car and travel reports in january 2007 issue that there are even more cameras on the way to New York city streets.the legislature gave the city the green light to put up more cameras all over the city. but now it is required that local officals to submit annual safty report on camera safty issues. It's about time that they did these cameras make it more unsafe.The timing of the amber is off sometimes
by one sec or more, This can causes fear of people who get tickets unfairly to the point that they will hit the brake on completion of don't walk sign to be hit from behind hard.this is a real problem write to your congress and tell them to take them down Now!!!

Photo Enforcement gone wild

Flash goes the light and there goes your money. More cameras to be added to NYC according to news channel 4 New York. The city is gearing up for more photo enforced locations through out the city This is nothing compared to what will follow this is an outrage people should not be trapt between a moving car and a yellow light. we now live in a world of fear where people hit there brakes when they see the don't walk sign blink there eyes should be on the road. This is nothing more then a money trapt. please be cushioned when you drive in the new era of spy equipment stay informed with our news letter for updates on location of new equipment and other scams that are draining your money. and safety so that it benefits them John A Ciampa

Watch out for parking meter scams

This is just plain wrong go get receipt for windshield and in the time it takes to get receipt to place in windshieldyou receive a nice fine and when you try fight this it gets even better.when you try to fight they send you a reduction of ten dollars and if you refuse the judge you on the phone if you are found guilty then you must pay the original amount of ticket. beware

Beware one second missing off amber time

beware of the three second amber.one of two thingswill happen you get a ticket or you get in to rear end collision.ok maybe you will stop on time but there will come a time when the camera will get you on the tail end when you just made it but not by the camera standards.when you remove one sec from the amber time this causes people to drive in fear. you have to be thinking to much about the camera and not on the things that count like the flow of traffic get the point I was trying to make a sale in an local rep office not knowing and the guy said do you know your in a elcted officals office i said thats good can i speak to him or her please to see what they are doing about bringing down these cameras for the safty all mabe they can stand up for the people for once.