Dorset Safety Camera Partnership on the Hook for $2.97m
In the past 10 years, more than twenty-five thousand drivers have been caught by a speed camera in Chideock (pronounced āChiddickā). According to the UK’s Daily Mail, a location marking one part of the roadās 30mph zone was defined as āSeatown Road.ā Problem: thereās no such place. The roadās real name is āDuck Street.ā The discrepancy came to light when Alan Dawe appealed his speeding conviction. The judge in the case threw out the ticket, ruling that “We cannot be sure the stretch of road is [speed] restricted.ā The Dorset Safety Camera Partnership (DSCP) has admitted that thousands of motorists were fined Ā£60 in error. If all of those drivers appeal, the partnership would owe them Ā£1.5m (U.S. $2.97m). Shouldn’t the points be removed from offenders’ licenses and the money be refunded automatically? And what about raised insurance premiums? And let me guess where the refunds will come from (now that the money’s already spent): taxpayers. Meanwhile, guess what Auto Express discovered when they asked 100 city councils how they were spending the money from a multi-million pound āroad safety grant?” Yup, speed cameras.