PappaGun, would that have been California? In San Diego, they were actually SHORTENING the yellow lights on intersections when they installed the red-light scameras. They also found the companies that made, installed, processed the pictures, and shared in the revenue from the scameras were installing the sensors in such a way to catch even more people who were not in violation. (You are not in violation unless you cross the line while the light is red. The sensors were installed BEHIND the line.PappaGun wrote:I am a two year resident of Texas now and there is a lot that takes some getting used to when it comes to traffic.
Where I previously lived, the standards were strictly followed and the speed limits, lane markings, signage etc. were consistent across the state. When I moved to Texas, one of my first comments to my wife was how poorly and inconsistently the lane markings are on the roads. Sometimes the left lane ends, sometimes the right lane ends, sometimes a merge is marked, sometimes it's not. I could go on n on.
Charles comment on the yellow light timing is spot on.
The same discussion was had where I used to live. I can no longer quote the standard, but there is a length of time for yellow lights quantified in hundreths of a second per ten miles an hour. It was shown there that a majority of intersections with red light cameras did not follow the standard (they were shorter, imagine that!) so they changed them and nullified all the tickets.
What Texas has done by adopting "Home Rule" is to insure that a defendant has no recourse and that revenue generation is maximized.
Ever try to cross-examine a computer with proprietary software in court? The had some officer that presumably had "examined the system" to testify that the camera systems were accurate.
Oh, and as I recall, the fine for red-light running was some $230. May be higher now.