Skip to Content
Streetsblog Empire State home
Streetsblog Empire State home
Log In
John Flanagan

Marty Golden’s Word on Speed Cams Has Been Good for Nothing

11:28 AM EDT on July 20, 2018

    State Senator Marty Golden

    So much for Marty Golden using his pull to get a vote on the speed camera bill in the State Senate.

    With less than a week until the city's 140 speed cameras go dark, there's been no movement from Senate Majority Leader John Flanagan to convene a special session and vote on the Every School Speed Camera Act, which would extend the program until 2022 and expand it to 290 school zones.

    Flanagan himself didn't respond yesterday after Governor Cuomo and members of Families for Safe Streets called for a vote on the bill in the Senate. That fell to Senate GOP spokesperson Candice Giove, who told reporters a few howlers about noble Senate Republicans crusading for safe streets, buffeted by the cynical campaign of advocates, professional engineers, trauma doctors, and victims' families who've lost everything to dangerous drivers.

    It wasn't a coherent argument. Giove told Ken Lovett and Khadija Hussain at the Daily News that "the city’s own report shows that most pedestrian deaths and injuries occur where speed cameras are not permitted by law," which sounds like... an excellent case for more of the speed cameras that have markedly reduced speeding, traffic injuries, and fatalities where they've been installed.

    But debating Giove is beside the point. It's Flanagan's conference, and Flanagan has little use for things like data-based policy or logical consistency. He just needs to satisfy the Senate GOP's core constituencies while preventing politically lethal fallout for any of his vulnerable caucus members. Losing any seat in November could flip the Senate to Democratic control.

    For the speed camera bill, Flanagan's constituency isn't the millions of New Yorkers who are less likely to get injured or killed when speeding is less prevalent. Only three of NYC's 26 state senators caucus with Republicans.

    The constituency Flanagan wants to protect is the Patrolmen's Benevolent Association, the largest union representing NYPD officers. The PBA ostensibly opposes speed cameras because they threaten the jobs of police officers, but trends in NYPD's headcount since the debut of the cameras don't support that explanation. More plausibly, PBA members resent getting $50 camera-issued fines for speeding at least 11 mph above the limit in school zones.

    Since the beginning of 2015, the PBA has contributed $68,500 to the Senate Republican Campaign Committee, $19,200 to Golden, and $5,000 to Flanagan. A disproportionate share of PBA members also live in the Senate GOP strongholds of Staten Island and Nassau and Suffolk counties, which include Flanagan's own district.

    The fact that the speed camera bill is still at an impasse may seem baffling, since Golden and two other Senate Republicans now say they support it. Unless, of course, Flanagan is trying to keep the PBA happy while shielding Golden from the anger of constituents who want to keep speeding in check. In which case, the hold-up makes perfect sense.

    Stay in touch

    Sign up for our free newsletter

    More from Streetsblog Empire State

    Thursday Headlines: Insurance Who Insurance Why Edition

    Auto insurance proposals ain't adding up. Plus other news.

    March 5, 2026

    State Senate Majority Leader Wants Answers on Insurance

    The growing chorus of state lawmakers who want clarity on how the governor's auto insurance proposal helps real New Yorkers now includes Stewart-Cousins, the second-most-powerful woman in state government.

    March 4, 2026

    Opinion: A Fairer — And Better — Way For Taxi Passengers To Pay The Congestion Toll

    A per-minute, rather than flat, fee on passengers entering the central business district would reduce traffic, Charles Komanoff says.

    March 4, 2026

    Wednesday Headlines: Congestion Pricing Victory Edition

    The feds' plan to kill congestion pricing went kaput. And more news.

    March 4, 2026

    Federal Judge Rules Trump Can’t Kill Congestion Pricing

    Trump does not have the power to toss out the Biden administration's decision to authorize the tolls, Judge Lewis Liman ruled.

    March 3, 2026

    Tuesday Headlines: White Chocolate Edition

    JT wants to say "bye, bye, bye" to his drunk driving footage. And more news.

    March 3, 2026
    See all posts