RED LIGHT cameras banned in Texas

 

By Travis Fedschun | Fox News

Drivers in the Lone Star State are about to be seeing less red.

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott announced Saturday evening he signed legislation that bans red light cameras across the state.

House Bill 1361, authored by Republican state Rep. Jonathan Stickland, would prohibit the use of “photographic traffic signal enforcement systems.”

 

RED-LIGHT CAMERAS COME UNDER FIRE, AT LEAST 7 STATES TRYING TO BAN THEM

 

The Republican governor took to Twitter to give people a personal view of him signing House Bill 1631.

 

“Hi, Governor Greg Abbott here at the capitol on Saturday, signing bills,” he said.

 

Seconds later, the governor held up the bill with his signature, saying the document “is now law.”

 

Stickland told FOX7 the bill was motivated by “a lot of reason.”

 

“No.1, privacy concerns. We think that the right to due process matters,” he told FOX7. “You have the right to face your accuser in court.”

 

The new law included a grandfather clause for cities involved in red light camera contracts that have yet to end, except if the contract includes a provision allowing for state law to break it.

 

“So, currently, we think as it is, the bill will continue to operate red light cameras in just two cities for a couple of years until the contract is timed out,” Stickland told FOX7.

 

Ever since becoming legal in 2007, Texas lawmakers have made attempts to turn the cameras off that were unsuccessful until now, according to the Star-Telegram.

 

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