Community Commentary -- TOM EDSON
If Costa Mesa is considering a contractual partnership with Nestor
Traffic Systems to install and operate cameras to photograph red-light
violators at intersections, it had better hire a good lawyer to defend
itself in court (“City may put brakes on red-light runners,†Aug. 15).
San Diego Superior Court Judge Ronald Styn determined recently that
San Diego’s system of photographing and citing traffic violators is
substantially unconstitutional because it clearly violates the state
vehicle code that requires, according to Styn, that only a governmental
agency, in cooperation with a law enforcement agency, may operate an
automated system.
Several hundred red-light citations will probably be dismissed because
Styn has ruled that the photographs in these cases won’t be admitted as
evidence.
While Styn’s ruling is not binding on Orange County officials, it does
raise the most pertinent question regarding the installation of
enforcement cameras. Nestor Traffic Systems proposes to install the
cameras at no cost to Costa Mesa, in return for which Nestor will manage
the daily operation of the system, including the issuance of citations,
and pocket some portion of the $271 fine for violations. And that is the
problem.
Styn stated in this recent ruling that San Diego violated both the
letter and intent of the vehicle code, which requires that “publicâ€
agencies must operate and administer such enforcement systems: “In this
case, the actions of [San Diego] do not satisfy the plain meaning of the
word ‘operate.’ The city has no involvement with, nor supervision over,
the ongoing operation†administered by Lockheed Martin, Styn wrote.
Peter Buffa’s recent column in the Daily Pilot (Comments &
Curiosities, “Photos cops won’t turn up prettiest pictures,†Aug. 19)
erroneously suggested that “the court gave [San Diego] a clean bill of
health†permitting the continued operation of the intersection cameras.
That’s factually incorrect. While privacy issues were handily dismissed
in this case, the larger and more important issue remains the constituted
legal obligation of public agencies to “enforce†the law and not to
surrender this function to private companies who derive economic benefit
from issuing citations. Buffa suggested that this was “a little more
legalese.†Hardly. A San Diego councilman commented that the system
should be “dumped†because people have lost faith in it and rightly so.
Citizens -- even those who recklessly endanger others when they run
red lights -- deserve to know that the system of vehicle code enforcement
is in the hands of public officials -- police officers, traffic
commissions and judges -- who are accessible and responsible to the
public. The San Diego cameras were turned off in June when it was
discovered that the contractor had modified the system without obtaining
prior public approval, and only after hundreds of lawsuits prompted a
council response. The proposed contractual relationship with Nestor
Traffic Systems violates that central principle of self-government and
regular oversight, and we are rightly suspicious that the economic
self-interest of such private contractors will trump the civil rights of
alleged violators.
When we accelerate through an intersection at the last possible
moment, we risk not only our own lives, but innocent lives as well --
aged parents, young children and kids on their way home. It’s wrong. It’s
stupid and tragically shortsighted. This proposed technological fix is
equally shortsighted, and it violates a clear and urgent need to separate
the administration of justice from the coffers of private interest. If
Costa Mesa decides to operate and manage its own traffic camera system,
I’m behind the idea, but don’t even consider the legally dubious
proposition of permitting a private vendor to administer public justice.
* Tom Edson is a Costa Mesa resident who teaches English at Mt. San
Antonio College.
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