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Vaughan speed cameras going live April 23

canada-man

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After being announced in October 2024, automated speed cameras will go live in Vaughan on April 23, according to the city.

The cameras will be set up in community safety zones, which are marked by signage. These zones include areas “near schools, neighbourhoods, daycare centres, playgrounds, parks and seniors’ residences” according to the city’s website.

The cameras will be in place in 10 locations, which were selected based on overall traffic volume, collision history and the presence of buildings, such as schools and parks. The locations will be rotated periodically in different community safety zones across the city over the next year.


Come April 23, if a vehicle exceeds the speed limit, the camera can capture an image that includes the vehicle’s licence plate. The image will then be reviewed by a provincial offences officer, who will mail the image and a ticket to the vehicle’s owner within 30 days.

The new speed cameras will join others that are already in place in Vaughan as part of York Region’s program.

The city release stresses that “evidence and research indicate other jurisdictions have effectively used this system to reduce speeds on local roads.”

The cameras have already been rolled out in other GTA municipalities, including Toronto, where some have been repeatedly targeted by vandalism.


According to the City of Toronto, 12 cameras were “vandalized beyond repair” in 2024. One particular camera, on Parkside Drive, was sawed down three times in 2024. There was also another case of vandalism in January, where a camera in the area of Avenue Road and Oaklands Avenue was cut down.

Repair crews told CTV News that each replacement of a camera cost the city about $10,000. In response, Toronto council approved the addition of 75 cameras, which will bring the city’s total to 150 this year.

Vaughan speed cameras going live April 23
 

GameBoy27

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Nov 23, 2004
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Question is, at how many km/h over do they issue tickets for.

Get the Waze app, it flags all the speed cameras. And no, I'm not encouraging speeding or dangerous driving, but travelling a few km/h over, on a wide open road, with light traffic, when they've reduced the limit by 10 km/h, is nothing more than a tax. I would rather people drive at a reasonable speed for the conditions, paying attention to what's around and in front of them, than focusing on their speedo to make sure they're not going to get a ticket. It's easy in some areas to exceed the limit by a little bit. Especially if you're going with the flow of traffic. Cities wouldn't be installing so many of them, if they weren't cash cows.
 
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Phil C. McNasty

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If the government really was so concerned about saving lives they would install speed bumps in school zones.

But we all know speed bumps dont generate revenue, so...........
 
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rhuarc29

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I want to know how far over the limit and for what sustained period of time (if any) before you get ticketed.
 

sohappy

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If the government really was so concerned about saving lives they would install speed bumps in school zones.

But we all know speed bumps dont generate revenue, so...........
Vaughan has speed bumps in the areas of these cameras. I live near one. The challenge is that people speed excessively between the speed bumps. Easy answer is more speed bumps, but then it affects emergency vehicles and general driving.
It is a revenue generator for the city based on people who choose to drive fast and pay extra for that choice. It is also a deterrent. I know someone who got one doing 62 in a 50 zone. He will pay more attention going forward. The ticket was sent within three days of the offense so it wasn't a month later as some people claim.
I personally do not have an issue with the cameras. If people want to speed in school zones, they should pay a fine. I think the lower limit should be set to at least 9kph over the limit, but I do not know what the actual setting is.
 
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Vinson

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Nov 24, 2023
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Question is, at how many km/h over do they issue tickets for.

Get the Waze app, it flags all the speed cameras. And no, I'm not encouraging speeding or dangerous driving, but travelling a few km/h over, on a wide open road, with light traffic, when they've reduced the limit by 10 km/h, is nothing more than a tax. I would rather people drive at a reasonable speed for the conditions, paying attention to what's around and in front of them, than focusing on their speedo to make sure they're not going to get a ticket. It's easy in some areas to exceed the limit by a little bit. Especially if you're going with the flow of traffic. Cities wouldn't be installing so many of them, if they weren't cash cows.
Does waze flag Cops too? I remember years ago they had radars that will tell you if there were cops around.
 

sohappy

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Apr 5, 2004
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Does waze flag Cops too? I remember years ago they had radars that will tell you if there were cops around.
Waze only reports what others users tell it. If you are the first to show up it won't tell you if the police are there. If you report one on Waze it should show up for others. You can confirm via Waze that the police are still there .

Or, you could just drive the speed limit and not worry about the cops and photo radar. This is always the best option.
 

Phil C. McNasty

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Dec 27, 2010
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Vaughan has speed bumps in the areas of these cameras. I live near one. The challenge is that people speed excessively between the speed bumps. Easy answer is more speed bumps, but then it affects emergency vehicles and general driving
So I grew up in Oakville, there are 2 schools that I know of that have speed bumps installed, and they've never had a fatal accident, nor do emergency vehicles have a problem getting through
.
One is at Maple Grove school



The other is at St James Roman Catholic Church on Morden road



So please enlighten me, if speed bumps work in Oakville, then why cant they work elsewhere also??
 
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Vinson

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Nov 24, 2023
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Waze only reports what others users tell it. If you are the first to show up it won't tell you if the police are there. If you report one on Waze it should show up for others. You can confirm via Waze that the police are still there .

Or, you could just drive the speed limit and not worry about the cops and photo radar. This is always the best option.
I'm not a speeder, but sometimes you can find yourself going a little faster, I just don't want to get tickets and it will help me be on alert .
 
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sohappy

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So I grew up in Oakville, there are 2 schools that I know of that have speed bumps installed, and they've never had a fatal accident, nor do emergency vehicles have a problem getting through
.
One is at Maple Grove school



The other is at St James Roman Catholic Church on Morden road



So please enlighten me, if speed bumps work in Oakville, then why cant they work elsewhere also??
I never said they don't work, you just can't put in enough to keep the people from speeding when they want to. We have also never had a fatal accident at the local schools. That doesn't mean people don't speed. It just means we, like Oakville have been lucky.

I have zero issues with speed cameras, red light cameras and I wish we had stop sign cameras. If you obey the law you won't have a problem. Easy peasy.
 

roddermac

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Sep 17, 2023
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Question is, at how many km/h over do they issue tickets for.

Get the Waze app, it flags all the speed cameras. And no, I'm not encouraging speeding or dangerous driving, but travelling a few km/h over, on a wide open road, with light traffic, when they've reduced the limit by 10 km/h, is nothing more than a tax. I would rather people drive at a reasonable speed for the conditions, paying attention to what's around and in front of them, than focusing on their speedo to make sure they're not going to get a ticket. It's easy in some areas to exceed the limit by a little bit. Especially if you're going with the flow of traffic. Cities wouldn't be installing so many of them, if they weren't cash cows.
Letting your vehicle roll in neutral and it will still go over 30km/h which is the speed limit in most residential neighborhoods now.
 

Leimonis

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Feb 28, 2020
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I never said they don't work, you just can't put in enough to keep the people from speeding when they want to. We have also never had a fatal accident at the local schools. That doesn't mean people don't speed. It just means we, like Oakville have been lucky.

I have zero issues with speed cameras, red light cameras and I wish we had stop sign cameras. If you obey the law you won't have a problem. Easy peasy.
I have issues with stop signs generally. Why don't they mean "yield" rather than stop? so unnecessary
 

Leimonis

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If I see one on the ground all set up I just run up and beat the fuck out of it

biggest cash grab in the history of this province
1744385132418.png
 

Phil C. McNasty

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Dec 27, 2010
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Spain now has stop sign cameras, and you can bet thats coming to Canada soon as well.
€ 200 Euro fine, and 4 demerit points


 
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roddermac

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Spain now has stop sign cameras, and you can bet thats coming to Canada soon as well.
€ 200 Euro fine, and 4 demerit points


The revenue they could generate in Peel region could pay off the deficit in no time.
 
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