Speed Camera

A speed-monitoring camera mounted atop a utility pole in the median of Meadow Branch Avenue focuses on motorists traveling in the school zone at John Kerr Elementary School.

WINCHESTER — Recently implemented cameras issued 3,553 speeding citations to drivers in Winchester school zones between Feb. 26 and April 16, according to the Winchester Police Department.

The cameras were installed in the school zones of John Kerr Elementary School, James Wood Middle School and Daniel Morgan Middle School. The cameras are active on school days beginning one hour before schools start classes and ending an hour after dismissal.

From Feb. 12 to Feb. 16, warnings were given to offenders speeding in the school zones, according to City Communications Director Kit Redmer. Starting on Feb. 26, the cameras began issuing citations.

The fee for a citation is $100 and is issued to any driver who exceeds the 25 mph limit in the school zones by 10 mph.

The citations are issued by a third party organization called Ultimate, which receives data from the cameras and mails the tickets to the speeders.

According to Redmer, Ultimate sends data from the cameras to Winchester Police Lt. Rob Bower and his team to verify that an infraction has indeed occurred.

“Lt. Bower administratively review the tickets and approve them. They have a thorough system of checks where they’ll look at the the time of day and make sure and triangulate that with the times that schools were open that day,” he said. “They run these checks to make sure the citations were properly issued and there weren’t any errors.”

The cameras are just one component of Winchester’s Roadway Safety Initiative, which was approved by City Council in November of 2023, and is aimed at improving driver, biker and pedestrian safety in the city.

In March, the city began installing 45 raised crosswalks throughout Winchester as another measure to curb speeding. The city also plans to install cameras on school bus stop arms to ensure the safety of students boarding or leaving the bus.

Additionally, Winchester Police Department Chief Amanda Behan has been doing analysis on which streets in the city experience the highest rate of speeders, according to Redmer.

In November, City Council voted unanimously to lower the speed limit on a number of Winchester streets, including a portion of Middle Road in the southwest part of the city.

Winchester police have also started a campaign to warn of the dangers of distracted driving, as a part of the city’s initiative.

“If all of these actions work we should see accident numbers go down,” Redmer said.

He said the city will be closely monitoring the measures to ensure they serve their intended purposes.

“We want to make sure all of these things are effective and that they are a means to an end, which is to keep our residents safe,” he said.

— Contact Max Bachmann at mbachmann@winchesterstar.com

(7) comments

zhemiman

Raised crosswalk is another name for a stupid speed bump. Who had this genius idea?

B Weller

Recently implemented cameras issued 3,553 speeding citations to drivers in Winchester school zones between Feb. 26 and April 16, according to the Winchester Police Department.

At $100 per ticket that's $355,300 dollars in only a few weeks! Imagine how much they will get for an entire year! And they want to raise taxes? Raise the meal tax? Raise taxes by making up new ways to tax. The rain water tax?

But they keep telling you it's not about the money.

Yeah right!

Got all that money in a few weeks and can't build a school with that? Oh I forgot, that is probably earmarked for the fat cats salaries. My bad.

Peter Snowfall

Winchester continues to make it more frustrating to drive around and then pats itself on the back. Have you ever considered the root of the problem is intersection cameras that turn the lights red before a driver can make it through 2 intersections without stopping? The city is so anti-traffic-flow that it enrages drivers.

Highways should be 40-45mph, main roads should be 35mph outside of school hours and residential roads should be 25 mph. Stop over classifying main roads as residential. Remove the road bumps and stop punishing good drivers while imagining this is a revenue strategy. Instead, make a PSA that drivers who exceed limits by 5 mph (10 is insane) will be ticketed BY A REAL PERSON.

mahogany

Let me guess. Ultimate gets paid per ticket and also gets a cut of the fine, right? And they control the timestamps on the photos, too. That’s why there are nearly 4000 of them in such a short period. Someone should take photos of the signs, if any, warning of the sudden glacial speed limit. This here is what they call a small town speed trap. Virginia is famous for them, except now they’re for everyone, not just tourists.

FlyRodMaker

We have been residents in the Winchester area for over 6 years and have, so far been the victims of two rear-end collisions at traffic lights. Thanks to the WPD for the efforts to enforce speed limits. Also, please try to enforce speeding through yellow/red lights. This is very evident around school districts such as the Kerr school district.

BillboBaggins

The city issued 3,553 camera tickets in a month and a half at $100 a pop.,That’s $350,000 revenue generated. We now know the real reason the cameras were installed. You know Frederick County sees this. County residents should start calling their supervisors.

jennaroad

Is the $100 citation issued to "any driver", or is the citation issued to the owner of the vehicle?

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