Lightfoot proposes CTA bus cameras, other video surveillance to nail motorists who block bus or bike lanes, loading zones - Chicago News Weekly

Wednesday, January 18, 2023

Lightfoot proposes CTA bus cameras, other video surveillance to nail motorists who block bus or bike lanes, loading zones

A new bike lane along West 119th Street and South Green Street in the West Pullman neighborhood is seen in this photo, Wednesday morning, Sept. 22, 2021. The Chicago Department of Transportation announced Wednesday that they are upgrading and building 100 miles of bike lanes across the city with the help of Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s Chicago Works capital plan.

Mayor Lori Lightfoot is backing a proposal to use bus cameras and video surveillance to ticket drivers for bus lane, bike lane or loading zone violations.

Pat Nabong/Sun-Times file

Chicago motorists who block bus lanes, bike lanes or loading zones might soon get nailed by surveillance cameras installed on CTA buses, “city vehicles and property and other locations” pinpointed by City Hall.

Nearly 20 years after a CTA experiment with bus surveillance cameras failed miserably, Mayor Lori Lightfoot wants to try it again and then some in a designated downtown area that has the “highest concentration of serious crashes, traffic congestion, public transit service, pedestrian and commercial activity in Chicago.”

At Wednesday’s City Council meeting, Lightfoot joined forces with downtown alderpersons Brian Hopkins (2nd) and Brendan Reilly (42nd) on a groundbreaking ordinance that would plunge Chicago deeper into the Big Brother world of video surveillance and automated ticketing.

It calls for creating a pair of pilot programs — “Smart Streets” and “Smart Loading Zones” — that use cameras to nail wayward motorists.

“The adoption of an automated parking enforcement pilot program is anticipated to result in safer driver behavior throughout the city and a reduction in the number of parking and standing violations within the pilot area,” the ordinance states.

“The adoption of the smart loading zone pilot program is anticipated to provide a reliable, efficient way for drivers to safely use curb space and a reduction in the number of parking and standing violations within the pilot area.”

Both pilot areas would have the same, bounded by North Avenue and Roosevelt Road, the lake and Ashland Avenue.

Both would use cameras mounted on public transit vehicles, city vehicles, city property and other locations identified by the Chicago Department of Transportation to record covered offenses and enforce parking regulations. Citations would hit mailboxes no sooner than 30 days after the system is installed. Every offending motorist would get one warning notice before being ticketed.

London pioneered the idea of using exterior bus cameras to nail motorists blocking bus lanes and at bus stops.

In 2002, then-CTA President Frank Kruesi proposed Chicago follow London’s lead. The City Council authorized the crackdown at the same time that red-light cameras made their debut in Chicago.

It took the CTA seven months to work out ticketing logistics with the Department of Revenue. The experiment was abruptly ended after blurry camera images and other technical trouble aboard just two CTA buses spared all but 400 of the 2,700 motorists caught blocking bus stops and bus lanes during a five-month rush-hour experiment.

Hopkins said video surveillance technology has advanced light-years since then. “It’s time to try it again,” he said. He’s certain it will result in “greater compliance with traffic laws” that too many motorists ignore.

“The problem now is exacerbated by ride-share drivers. But it’s really everybody. Once you see that ride-share drivers can park and obstruct travel lanes anywhere they want, then everybody starts doing it. We just have widespread disregard for no-parking, no-standing restrictions. And it causes traffic backups,” Hopkins said.

“You never used to see people stopping on Michigan Avenue. There’s no curb lane there where you can stop and make deliveries. And now, people do it all the time.”

Hopkins acknowledged speed cameras and red-light cameras have been wildly unpopular and that even greater use of video surveillance will generate more controversy. But, he said, “With greater enforcement, the word will get out” to stay in your lane.

“When you’re in a bike lane, you feel safe because you’re in a protected area. But it’s an illusion. ... We’ve seen fatalities [of] someone on a bike and had to make an unsafe maneuver and got struck by a vehicle because they couldn’t stay in a bike lane.”

Reilly argued there are “far too many loading zone abuses” downtown and Chicago police officers are “spread far too thin to dedicate the time necessary to properly enforce right-of-way violations.”

“Commercial vehicles that park or load in a bike lane or a lane of traffic pose a serious threat to public safety. We need to step up our enforcement efforts,” he wrote in an email.



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