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Ahead of Monday鈥檚 first day of classes, D.C.鈥檚 Department of Transportation is reminding drivers that zipping around stopped school buses will come with a hefty fine this school year.
The program, which launched in the final weeks of the last school year, added cameras to 25 school bus stop arms. When the bus is stopped 鈥 its stop arm is extended and the lights are flashing 鈥 cars can鈥檛 pass the bus on either side of the road, unless there鈥檚 a median in between the two lanes.
Sharon Kershbaum, DDOT鈥檚 acting director, said the initiative aims to protect the more than 4,000 students who ride the city鈥檚 school buses.
鈥淭his is a way to make sure that, as our most vulnerable road users, these are students that are getting on and off buses, that they are safe and they don’t have to worry about cars that are driving by quickly and not seeing them,鈥 Kershbaum said.
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In partnership with the Office of the State Superintendent of Education, DDOT opted to move forward with the program based on its success in other states and cities.
Fairfax County Public Schools, Virginia鈥檚 largest school division, is planning to launch a similar program, with cameras on 50 school bus stop arms, this school year.
In D.C., the cameras were only in effect for a few weeks at the end of last year, but Kershbaum is calling this fall the agency鈥檚 鈥渕ajor launch.鈥
A DDOT spokeswoman didn鈥檛 immediately have information on the cost of the cameras or data on the number of warnings and citations given out in the weeks after the program started in the late spring.
The cameras capture video of potential violators, and then two DDOT employees review it to confirm whether 鈥渢he car was driving when it shouldn鈥檛 have been,鈥 Kershbaum said.
Then, the incident gets passed to the DMV, which actually sends out the ticket. Passing a school bus with its stop arm extended comes with a $500 fine.
鈥淥ur goal is compliance,鈥 Kershbaum said. 鈥淲e don鈥檛 want people to get infractions. We just want people to follow the law.鈥
While there aren鈥檛 immediate plans to expand the program, Kershbaum said the 鈥済ood things about the buses is that they can be moved to different routes, so it鈥檚 not fixed the way some of our other traffic enforcement cameras are.鈥
Traffic enforcement cameras are usually effective in changing driver behavior, Kershbaum said.
鈥淪uccess with traffic enforcement is that there are no infractions,鈥 Kershbaum said, 鈥渢hat people understand that there is a big impact, and they鈥檒l feel it in their wallet if they are not complying with the law, and they stop doing it.鈥
Some critics of the city鈥檚 automated traffic enforcement initiatives, including others such as speed and red light cameras, argue they鈥檙e intended to drive revenue. But Kershbaum is adamant the focus is safety.
鈥淭he fact that there are revenues that the District gains from it, it鈥檚 not something that drives our interest in the program, and never has been,鈥 she said.
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