Street smarts: Tech that could make it easier — and safer — to navigate our cities

News Room
By News Room 12 Min Read

In Ontario, speed cameras are an incendiary topic. They’ve sparked fiery Reddit threads and elicited acts of vandalism: one such device in Toronto’s High Park neighbourhood was cut down seven times in less than a year. The provincial government is poised to table a bill banning speed cameras, which Premier Doug Ford has recently denounced as a municipal cash grab, fuelling further public debate. (Legislation to use the devices was passed by the Ford government in 2019; the proposed ban would be a sharp policy reversal reminiscent of Ontario’s short-lived photo radar initiative in the 1990s.)

Proponents of speed cameras say they help prevent road collisions and save lives, often citing a widely referenced SickKids Hospital study about their effectiveness, which found that they reduced speeding in urban school zones by 45 per cent. Critics contend that the devices excessively penalize drivers and divert attention from larger issues, such as how road design shapes driver behaviour.

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