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25 new speed cameras set to come online across Toronto

Citynews.ca
Feb. 1, 2023

The City of Toronto is expanding its Automated Speed Enforcement (ASE) program with a new round of cameras popping up as early as Wednesday.

The expansion means 25 new cameras across the city -- one for each ward. The latest devices will join the other 50 that are currently in rotation to help reduce speeding.

 

Warning signs have been up since early November at the new locations. The signs must be up for 90-days before the cameras come online, the city started posting the warnings on Nov. 2, 2022.

Locations for 25 new automated speed cameras:

 

Each city ward will now have three speed cameras that are mainly focused in school zones.

The original 50 cameras are now into their sixth round of locations.

New locations for 50 existing automated speed cameras:

 

The camera on Parkside Drive, south of Algonquin Avenue, was the only device to not rotate last fall. That camera alone was responsible for approximately 10 per cent of the total tickets according to the last round of data made available by the city.

Following a fatal crash last October, there were calls to improve safety along that stretch of Parkside Drive. Residents have long called for photo radar and a redesign of the roadway.

In total, the city’s Automated Speed Enforcement Program issued over 48,000 tickets through August and September last year. The most frequent repeat offender was ticketed 12 times for speeding on Brant Street south of Adelaide.