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Roadside cameras to make $94 million less than Queensland government expectations

www.abc.net.au Roadside cameras to make $94 million less than Queensland government expectations

The state government had forecast its Camera Detected Offence Program would make more than half a billion dollars this financial year, but is set to fall well short.

Roadside cameras to make $94 million less than Queensland government expectations

In short: Queensland has a range of roadside cameras to detect offences such as speeding, mobile phone use, and not wearing a seatbelt.
The government has significantly revised how much it expects to make from cameras with revenue in 2023-24 tipped to fall $94 million short.
What's next? The cameras are now projected to make $409 million in 2023-24, followed by $465.8 million in 2024-25.

Brace yourself for a reduction in tolerance. Government relies on that speed camera income so if there's a shortfall they'll stop dropping the percent tolerances until we hit the 1kph over fines they hand out in Victoria.

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  • Given speedometers are only required to be +- 10%, that's some serious bullshit...

    • Pretty sure it's +10%/-0%... i.e. it can read up to 10% faster than reality, but can never read slower than reality. That's why most cars speedos tend to be out by around +5% to +8% from factory - making sure they are right in the middle, with a slight bias towards reading faster.

      • Well, that's better than I thought, thanks for the correct, I hope, but still bad if one wants traffic to move (I'm more interested in bikes moving personally, but whatever…)

        • but still bad if one wants traffic to move

          No it's not. The most important thing for keeping traffic moving is making sure people drive consistently and predictably. It's when people slam the brakes (or even feather the brakes, if the person following them is too close) that you end up with traffic jams. A difference of a few km/h in the maximum speed you can be travelling without getting fined isn't a relevant factor.

        • It used to Β± 10% but the ADRs were changed somewhere in the '00s (2006, I think).

    • Speedometers are required to be +10% plus 4km/h, -0 km/h. If your speedo says you're doing 60 and you're actually doing 61, your speedo is uncompliant. On the other hand you could be doing as little as 50 km/h. If it reads 100, you could be doing as little as 86 km/h or as much as 100.

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