Calgary police blame drop in photo radar fines for $28M revenue shortfall

Started by bosman, 2025-02-09 08:11

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Calgary police blame drop in photo radar fines for $28M revenue shortfall 
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Calgary
Calgary police blame drop in photo radar fines for $28M revenue shortfall
'Never supposed to be the main source of funding for policing,' says Alberta minister
a silver SUV is parked alongside a snowy road. there are fluorescent yellow drive safe banners on the  vehicle. The Calgary Police Service's operating budget is facing a $28-million revenue shortfall after a decrease in photo radar fines, according to its chief constable.
Following a series of changes to photo radar regulations at the provincial level — such as limiting where officers can deploy, mandating highly visible markings on enforcement vehicles — CPS Chief Mark Neufeld says automated enforcement ticket revenues have declined.
"We've seen increased costs for things like fuel, utilities, vehicles, parts, labour, insurance, plus a weakened Canadian dollar.  We know all these  problems and we  are to monitor in all 2024 and things that  have affected our  budget, "Neufel Reporters said a  picture of printing on Friday.
"At the  same time, the  photo's radine process was led in a  political decision. This has led to an important political decision regarding the  orientation that  has identified the impact of  impact of the schedule of about $ 28 million  in our  operator budget in 2025 and each year  later.
According to  Neufelhel, 85% of the  CP Budget is dedicated to  costs costs, as  the wages and  benefits.
The Alberta government  is on purpose to  reduce 70% of photo radar  sites
Alberta Transport Minister says photo radar cuts  are not a  security risk
Neufelhed said that after receiving the January  Report, the CPs of Examine Strategies to reduce  operational costs so to go  to the budget, which  question. "
He says the budget shortfall will have impacts on the organization during a time when demands for police services are at an all-time  high.
a man in a police uniform
Chief Constable Mark Neufeld spoke to the media about the $28-million operating revenue shortfall on Friday.
"Over the last number of years, with all of the protests and demonstrations and additional requests for police, and given the fact that we've had staffing issues, we've in effect lived on a credit card," he  said.
"So we have called members in on overtime to cover some of the challenges and we've balanced that off against vacancy dollars. So now, clearly, we're not going to be able to do that going forward."
Alberta bans photo radar on Edmonton, Calgary ring roads
However, the police chief says they're looking to cut costs internally before resorting to cutting  staffing.
"It's not as though there's a bunch of fat to cut. We're cutting muscle," he said.
Alberta government responds
In December, the provincial government announced its plans to slash the number of photo radar sites in Alberta by 70 per cent, with Alberta's Minister of Transportation and Economic Corridors Devin Dreeshen calling photo radar measures a "cash cow."
In response to Friday's CPS news conference, Dreeshen said he still believes photo radar shouldn't be a tool for balancing municipal police budgets.
"Photo radar was never supposed to be about revenue generation," Dreeshen told CBC News on  Friday.
Alberta Transportation and Economic Corridors Minister Devin Dreeshen donned an apron with a "no cash cow" logo to announce a cut in photo radar sites starting April  1.
"It was never supposed to be the main source of funding for policing in Edmonton and Calgary, or any municipality in the province. Photo radar and the revenue from it was always supposed to be about traffic safety."
Dreeshen said municipalities shouldn't want to "base any policing budget off of a perfect photo radar system because the revenue that it generates should be zero," considering photo radar fines are designed to change driver behaviour.
As part of the province's changes to photo radar, come April 1, photo radar sites on all provincial highways will be banned, except for those in school, playground and construction  zones.
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"I think Albertans should be confident knowing — going forward — if you do get a photo radar ticket in the mail, it's in an area that you obviously shouldn't have been speeding in," he said.
The minister added that any funding shortfall for CPS is something that should be addressed through city council

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