Skip to Content
Streetsblog Empire State home
Streetsblog Empire State home
Log In
Nicole Malliotakis

Speed Cameras Have Saved Lives in NYC, But to Nicole Malliotakis, They’re a “Gimmick”

4:08 PM EDT on March 22, 2017

    Assembly Member Nicole Malliotakis says speed cameras are a revenue scam. These kids beg to differ. Photo: Brad Aaron

    Staten Island Assembly Member Nicole Malliotakis's attack on life-saving speed enforcement cameras is like a breath of stale air.

    Yesterday Mayor de Blasio reaffirmed that the city will press state legislators to relax arbitrary restrictions on the cameras, the Daily News reported.

    Albany limits NYC to 140 speed cameras to cover 6,000 miles of surface streets. Cameras must be placed near schools and can be operated only during school hours. This means they can’t be used on some of the most dangerous streets and are inactive during low-visibility hours when pedestrians are most at risk.

    Eighty-five percent of fatalities and severe injuries occur in locations where speed cameras aren't allowed under current law, Transportation Commissioner Polly Trottenberg said Tuesday.

    Even with those limitations, traffic fatalities fell substantially in 2014 and 2015, when the city was rolling out new cameras. But last year, as the program ran up against the limits imposed by Albany, the improvement tapered off.

    To hear Malliotakis tell it, however, the traffic safety benefits are a smoke screen. "This program is a gimmick to raise revenue for the city," she said, according to the News.

    And you thought you'd heard the last of the old cameras-as-revenue-scam canard. Here are some facts: DOT data show that speeding, the leading cause of fatal NYC traffic crashes, drops by 60 percent where cameras are deployed. You can tell the cameras work because they issue fewer tickets over time, as the prevalence of speeding declines. 

    But wait, there's more. From the News:

    If the city cared about pedestrians, she said, it would add stop signs, install sidewalks, clear the snow at bus stops and go after drunk drivers.

    Hold that straw man! As Malliotakis knows, speed cameras are one of many tools NYC uses to impose order on city streets. (The bus lane camera program she and Shelly Silver tried to kill is another.) By framing speed cameras as an "either/or" alternative to other traffic-calming measures, Malliotakis has to hope New Yorkers haven't noticed the city has been redesigning streets (while prosecuting drunk drivers) for the last decade.

    “Anyone that would get behind the wheel and gamble with the lives of others on the road deserves to be punished to the fullest extent of the law,” Malliotakis once said. Sounds like an argument for speed cameras.

    Stay in touch

    Sign up for our free newsletter

    More from Streetsblog Empire State

    Friday Headlines: 205 Million Reasons To Be Happy

    Stopping New York's transportation goals is harder than it looks. Plus more news.

    February 13, 2026

    Talking Headways Podcast: Concrete Doesn’t Spend Money, People Do

    Dr. Lawrence Frank shows how the decisions we make about the built environment are a symbol of why the world is so f'd up. A very special edition of Talking Headways.

    February 12, 2026

    NYC Mayor Mamdani Pitches Free Buses (Cheap!) Plus Other Transportation Needs on ‘Tin Cup’ Day

    Mamdani gave his former colleagues in state government a glimpse of his thinking on transportation and city operations, and hopes they can send more cash his city's way.

    February 12, 2026

    Thursday Headlines: Is Your Tin Cup Full Edition

    Tin Cup day for many mayors is basically like returning to your alma mater for alumni weekend, except you're asking them for money. And more news.

    February 12, 2026

    ‘Everyone’s At Fault’: NYC Government Pointing Fingers Over Lowering Speed Limits

    The mayor and the City Council are using the "art of deflection" to keep the status quo instead of lowering the speed limit to a safer 20 miles per hour.

    February 12, 2026

    More Troubles for Fly E-Bike: Feds Order Costly Moped Recall

    Federal officials have ordered Fly E-Bike to recall all Fly 10 mopeds, the latest troubles for the micromobility company.

    February 11, 2026
    See all posts