Announcement Detail


New Highway Speed Camera Language Nixed From CT Transportation Bill

New Highway Speed Camera Language Nixed From CT Transportation Bill by Staff Report

traffic sign with speed limit and camera symbol
FILE PHOTO — A traffic sign warns motorists of upcoming speed enforcement cameras in Beacon Falls.  Credit: Viktoria Sundqvist / CT Newsjunkie

HARTFORD, CT – The Connecticut legislature has removed a section of a transportation bill that would have allowed the state Department of Transportation to operate automated speed cameras on limited-access highways.

An amendment to House Bill 5464, An Act Implementing Recommendations From the Department of Transportation, removed section 15 of the bill on April 29 in a House vote. The amended bill then passed the House 99-51 mostly along party lines. It now awaits action in the Senate.

Section 15 would have allowed the DOT to implement a pilot program featuring automated traffic devices on highways with a history of excessive speeding or bad accidents, after working with the Department of Emergency Services and Public Protection to pick the specific locations.

The DOT already operates speed cameras in some work zones, after a successful pilot program approved in 2023 for three cameras. The agency is now expanding that program, with 15 cameras in total. Drivers who speed in work zones should expect to get ticketed automatically starting in June, DOT officials have said.

The department also oversees and approves all municipalities wanting to install automated speed or red-light cameras. So far, 15 municipalities in Connecticut have been approved for the cameras, including Middletown, Milford, New Haven, Stamford, West Hartford, and Wethersfield.

Hartford and New Britain have also submitted plans that are awaiting approval by the state. 

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