
John P. Krudy THE WASHINGTON TIMES
For Washington-area motorists who live in fear of the flash from a speed camera and the costly ticket that will surely follow, there is hope.
Joe Scott has an answer to their nervous prayers.
The 39-year-old D.C. resident has invented a GPS application that alerts motorists to speed traps and red-light cameras. He is marketing his PhantomAlert software as a way to help motorists avoid becoming entangled in the rapidly expanding web of traffic-enforcement cameras.
"Michigan Avenue at Trinity, or the I-395 tunnel — that camera is vicious," Mr. Scott said.
Mr. Scott's program has 10,000 subscribers who together have logged
110,000 speed traps and red-light cameras across the country. The
technology is similar to the GPS Angel and Escort Inc.'s Passport,
detectors that run off a GPS database of enforcement locations.
These tools can be useful in Virginia and the District, which
prohibit radar detector use, and in Maryland, where a new law allows
local governments to place speed cameras in highway construction zones
and expand their use in school zones. Gov. Martin O'Malley signed the
bill May 19.
A small alliance of drivers rights groups is attempting to put the
new Maryland law to a statewide referendum. Ronald Ely, editor of
stopbigbrothermd.org, one of the groups participating in the referendum
drive, said tools like Mr. Scott's give motorists a way to fight back
to what he calls unfair enforcement.
"Driving laws were negotiated with the assumption they would be
enforced by humans," Mr. Ely said. "When that changes, people need to
ask for a change to the laws, or get some kind of technical
assistance."
Randolph Pribgen purchased the PhantomAlert program for his GPS
navigator a year ago. It was mostly for safety, he said, but it does
help escape the long arm of the law given the growing numbers of speed
cameras in Maryland.
"I love kids, so it's good for school zones," said Mr. Pribgen, 43,
of Newmarket, Md. "Sometimes I'm driving, in outer space somewhere, and
that alert just brings me back to Earth."
The technology alerts Mr. Pribgen a few hundred yards before his car
reaches a school, speed camera or known enforcement zone, flashing a
red light on his GPS unit and sounding a voice warning.
The drivers who purchase the software help maintain and improve its
accuracy by adding new speed traps they spot. The information on the
Google map program uploads to Mr. Pribgen's GPS and tells him the
proximity and type of trap he is approaching.
Police departments across the country are not opposed to GPS systems
like Mr. Scott's because they provide public information available on
police Web sites.
"[GPS systems] are perfectly acceptable," said Lucille Baur, a
spokeswoman for the Montgomery County Police Department. "We have no
desire to hide the location of these cameras."
Ms. Baur said road signs already warn drivers about the cameras.
Montgomery uses red-light cameras and speed cameras on residential
roads where the speed limit is 35 mph or lower.
Mr. Scott said his product, available online in versions that cost
$40 to $120, is designed to raise awareness and to "help GPS owners to
legally avoid unjust traffic tickets."
He said it is not right to use traffic enforcement cameras as a
means to raise revenue. He supports steps California has taken to
reduce red-light violations, such as raising fines but lengthening the
time of yellow lights.
"But keeping it short, then charging $40 to $50 for the ticket — that smells like revenue to me," he said.
Article at: http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2009/jun/08/drivers-use-gps-to-avoid-speed-traps-high-fines/
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