Majority of drivers caught by photo radar camera on King Edward Avenue are from Quebec, councillor says
More than half of the drivers caught speeding by the new photo radar camera on Ottawa's King Edward Avenue are from Quebec.
The automated speed enforcement camera on the southbound lanes of King Edward Avenue, between Cathcart Street and St. Patrick Street, issued 10,592 speeding tickets in June, and has issued 28,742 speeding tickets in its first four months of operation.
Coun. Tim Tierney, who is chair of the city's transportation committee, says 51 per cent of the speeding tickets issued by the camera on King Edward Avenue in June were to drivers with out-of-province licence plates.
"Fifty-one per cent is quote, unquote out-of-province, that's Quebec tickets. We do have a reciprocal agreement, so they're paying the freight on whatever tickets they get driving into Ontario," Tierney told Newstalk 580 CFRA's The Morning Rush on Monday.
"Anyone that's driven into Quebec, and they do have cameras as well, and received a ticket and you rumble about it, well now it goes both ways."
Data available on the City of Ottawa's website shows the average speed recorded by the photo radar camera on King Edward Avenue was 36 km/h in March, 35 km/h in April and 34 km/h in May. In May, the 85th percentile speed (the speed at which 85 per cent of traffic is travelling or below) was 43 km/h, according to the data.
"Everyone wants to be safe. It's not a suggestion on the sign, it is what the law says and if you're speeding be thankful that it's a financial penalty as a good warning and not points, because that has much larger ramifications," Tierney said.
Tierney says of the 39,361 speeding tickets issued by Ottawa's 40 photo radar cameras in June, 22 per cent of the tickets were issued to out-of-province drivers.
In 2018, the city of Ottawa reached an agreement with the Canadian Council of Motor Transport Administrators, giving the city access to records and information of Quebec drivers and allowing the city to issue camera-related tickets.
While some people have raised concerns about a lack of signs promoting the speed on the roads near cameras, Tierney notes all cameras have signs.
"We do kind of put a big sign that says, 'Camera Ahead.' Unless we put it in blinking neon, there's nothing really we can do about it – it becomes more of a challenge," Tierney said, adding the Ontario government mandates the signage around automated speed enforcement cameras.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
'Buy nothing': PSAC wants federal workers to boycott downtown Ottawa businesses
A union representing federal employees is asking its members to bring their own lunch to work, in an apparent retaliation against downtown Ottawa businesses as new return-to-office protocols begin.
Actions speak louder: What experts are saying about the body language in the U.S. presidential debate
The highly anticipated debate between Kamala Harris and Donald Trump was a heated matchup. Here's what experts who analyzed the exchange had to say.
Jon Bon Jovi helps talk woman down from ledge on Nashville bridge
Rock and Roll Hall of Famer Jon Bon Jovi and a video production assistant persuaded a woman standing on the ledge of a pedestrian bridge in Nashville to come back over the railing to safety.
Inside a Manitoba ghost town, a group of ladies works to keep it alive
Abandoned homes line the streets of Lauder, a town that's now a ghost of what it once was. Yet inside, a small community is thriving.
B.C. family says razor blades found in bag of frozen blueberries
The B.C. parents of an 11-year-old girl said their daughter recently found a package containing razor blades in a bag of Kirkland-brand frozen blueberries.
Langenburg UFO sighting commemorated with silver coin
Perhaps Saskatchewan's most famous encounter with Unidentified Aerial Phenomenon (UAP/UFO) – "The Langenburg Event" is now being immortalized in the form of a collective coin.
Taylor Swift wins at MTV Video Music Awards and Chappell Roan gets medieval
Taylor Swift and Post Malone took home the first award at the 2024 MTV Video Music Awards, for best collaboration, handed to them by Flavor Flav and Olympian Jordan Chiles.
Man, 70, and woman, 71, found shot dead in Montreal apartment, police
Montreal police (SPVM) are investigating after a man, 70, and woman, 71, were killed by gunshot wounds in an apartment.
Tens of thousands in the dark after Hurricane Francine strikes Louisiana with 100 m.p.h. winds
Hurricane Francine struck Louisiana on Wednesday evening as a Category 2 storm that forecasters warned could bring deadly storm surge, widespread flooding and destructive winds on the northern U.S. Gulf Coast.