The Senate recently backed a bill in Colorado enabling more Colorado locations to use photo radar vans and detectors to fine drivers for speeding. Only three cities now use photo radar: Boulder, Fort Collins, and Denver.
According to an AP Wire, “Currently cities can use photo radar only near parks, schools, construction zones and streets with speed limits under 35 mph. Democratic Sen. Bob Bacon’s bill would also allow it on streets with speed limits up to 55 mph. Fines would be capped at $40.”
If you’ve spend any time on the roads in Boulder, Denver, or Fort Collins, you may have noticed an unmarked van on the side of the road, not coincidentally just down the road from a posted sign that says, “Photo radar in use.” Inside is an automated camera system and radar detector that records the speed of each passing vehicle.
The system takes a photograph of the driver and license plate, and the registered owner then receives a ticket by mail. If a ticket goes unpaid or unaddressed after a certain number of days, a member of the Boulder County Sheriff’s Department usually attempts to collect at the home of the registered owner of the car. In other words, your prize for speeding past an unmarked van is a very expensive picture of you most likely talking on your cell phone. And if you’re slow enough getting your check out the door, you get a visit from law enforcement’s own welcome wagon. (You might want to remove that “Bad cop, no donut” bumper sticker you thought was so funny last year.)
But it’s not just about the vans. From the City of Boulder Web site:
Photo Red Light
Running a red light is one of the most frequent causes of accidents at intersections in Boulder. Red light enforcement through traditional officer-based efforts is difficult and potentially dangerous. In response, Boulder has implemented photo red light, an automated camera and computer system mounted on a traffic signal pole at an intersection. Photo red light takes pictures of any vehicles that run a red light, records the time elapsed since the light turned red and the vehicle entered the intersection, and issues a ticket. The photo red light systems are installed at key Boulder intersections that have a high number of accidents.
At present, photo radar and red light systems are for fining speeders only. Offenders are not fined for secondary offenses, such as not wearing a seat belt. Also on the horizon, talking on a cell phone without the use of a hands-free device is not illegal in Colorado now, but lawmakers are considering backing a motion towards its prohibition.







