October 8, 2024

Adelaide’s newly installed mobile phone detection cameras have captured a staggering 2544 drivers using their phones behind the wheel in just their first week of operation, leading to $1.67 million in fines.

Three repeat offenders have already been caught so many times that they’ve been stripped of their licences.

“At the end of the day, the simple way to avoid a fine or stop losing your licence is just not to use a phone while driving,” Superintendent Darren Fielke said.

READ MORE: Man who led Australia through COVID-19 to retire

He said the three drivers who lost their licences had received warning letters during the initial grace period.

“It is baffling and disappointing because we’ve been speaking this message for a number of weeks,” Fielke said.

However, police say the primary objective of the new cameras isn’t revenue raising but changing dangerous driving habits.

READ MORE: Qantas fined $100m for selling seats on cancelled flights

“This has always been about changing driver behaviour,” Fielke said.

“If this takes fines and losing licenses to change behaviour, that is what we’re relieved for.”

The statistics indicate the cameras’ presence is having the desired impact, with the number of drivers caught using their phones dropping compared to the grace period.

This article was produced with the assistance of 9ExPress.

links to content on ABC

9News 

Read More 

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *