Skip to Content
Streetsblog Empire State home
Streetsblog Empire State home
Log In
Andrew Gounardes

SPEED CAMERAS WORK, PART II: Drivers Causing Fewer Collisions As Program Expands, Data Shows

12:01 AM EDT on October 16, 2019

    Governor Cuomo signing an executive order last summer to continue the city’s school speed camera program. Photo: Kevin Coughlin/State of New York

    Tens of thousands more reckless drivers are getting caught for speeding near schools, but they are also causing thousands fewer crashes — thanks not just to dozens of additional speed camera systems that have been deployed since this summer, but the expanded hours that the systems are operating.

    On July 11, the Department of Transportation started expanding the life-saving school-zone camera program by installing 40 cameras across the city each month so the total number will rise from 140 to 750 camera systems by next June. But far more important, data show, was the expansion of the hours that the systems could operate — now from 6 a.m. to 10 p.m. instead of just during school hours.

    Moving violation tickets are way up since the city started expanding its speed-camera system. Graphic: Jehiah Czebotar
    Moving violation tickets are way up since the city started expanding its speed-camera system. Graphic: Jehiah Czebotar
    Moving violation tickets are way up since the city started expanding its speed-camera system. Graphic: Jehiah Czebotar

    As a result, there's been a sharp increase in the number of speeding tickets that have been issued — and drivers are clearly responding by slowing down: the number of crashes has been dropping as more cameras are turned on.

    From July 11 through Oct. 11, there were 53,325 motor vehicle collisions throughout the five boroughs — 6,188, or 10.4 percent, fewer than the same time period in 2018.

    At $50 a ticket for going more than 10 miles per hour over the speed limit, the city could rake in millions of dollars per month. But the speed cameras aren't about the money — they're about saving lives, and they've been doing just that, said a state lawmaker from Brooklyn whose bill gave the city the green light to install the additional 610 camera systems.

    “Speed cameras work. Period. They change driver behavior and cause people to slow down, protecting New Yorkers from injury and death in traffic collisions,” State Senator Andrew Gounardes told Streetsblog.

    Such a dramatic decrease in crashes is unprecedented in the so-called Vision Zero era. Indeed, total crashes in 2015 were 8.5 percent higher than the previous year. And in 2016, crashes again increased, this time by 4.3 percent, according to city data.

    But more speed cameras have bucked that trend: During the first week of school in 2017, there were 5,432 crashes citywide. In 2018, there were slightly less with 5,362. But this year, after the expansion of the speed-camera program, there were 3,994 across the five boroughs — 26 percent fewer than 2017 and 25 percent fewer than last year.

    And get this: when the school-zone cameras were turned off for roughly one month by the state legislature in July, 2018, there were 20,630 crashes during the period. But this summer, during the exact same period — when the cameras were not only back on, but starting to expand — there were 2,048 fewer crashes, a decline of almost 10 percent.

    This was the program that the now-repudiated Senate Republicans declined to pass last year before they were thrown from power.

    Stay in touch

    Sign up for our free newsletter

    More from Streetsblog Empire State

    Friday Headlines: The State Has Its Own Agenda Edition

    A gruesome scene in Syracuse and our state Comptroller is looking for his seat.

    January 16, 2026

    Friday Video: Remember When Central Park Was Actually Dangerous?

    Streetfilms legend Clarence Eckerson reframes the debate about Manhattan's premier green space in just 45 seconds.

    January 16, 2026

    Gov. Hochul’s Uber-Backed Car Insurance ‘Reforms’ Threaten Payouts To Crash Victims

    Hochul wants to limit payouts to crash victims under the guise of "affordability" and bogus claims about "staged crashes."

    January 15, 2026

    A ‘Demographic Time Bomb’ Is About To Go Off — And the Transportation Sector Isn’t Ready

    A top firm is warning that the "silver tsunami" will have big implications for the climate, unless U.S. communities act fast.

    January 15, 2026

    Thursday Headlines: Legalese And Funding Freeze Edition

    Lawyers and pedestrians are calling foul on the governor's car insurance premium proposals and upstate transit needs more dough. Plus other news.

    January 15, 2026

    Public Transit Is Essential To The Success Of New York’s Affordability Agenda

    If we're going to talk about transit affordability, that conversation can't stop in New York City.

    January 14, 2026
    See all posts