By Debby Woodin
dwoodin@joplinglobe.com
It might be just as well that Joplin decided not to use red-light cameras, especially if the city had gone with Springfield’s system for handing the resulting traffic tickets.
The Missouri Supreme Court on Tuesday threw out the Springfield system.
“This is a $100 case. But sometimes, it’s not the money — it’s the principle,” Judge Mark Fitzsimmons wrote in the court’s unanimous decision.
The court said Missouri cities, with the exception of Kansas City and St. Louis, are required to take all moving violations to a court rather than dealing with them in administrative hearings.
In the Springfield case, Adolph Belt Jr., a 30-year veteran of the Missouri State Highway Patrol, was issued a notice that his car had been photographed running a red light. Belt, described in the court opinion as a traffic expert, timed the yellow light at the intersection in question and “found that it was rather quick.” He also contended that the traffic signal and the cameras needed to be synchronized.
Belt’s challenge was denied by the hearing examiner in his case and, since it was an administrative procedure, he also was denied a chance to have his concerns heard in court. He was fined $100.
Missouri’s high court wrote in the opinion that Springfield’s ordinance allowing the red-light cameras was barred by Section 479.010 of Missouri law.
Some cities have been joining with private companies to install the camera systems, bypass courts and split the proceeds of the tickets, which in most cases carry a $100 fine. Because the tickets are handled in administrative instead of judicial proceedings, though, they don’t go on a driver’s license record or against a motorist’s insurance policy.
A similar system was proposed last year to the Joplin City Council, which rejected it after some consideration.
The council in February 2009 heard a proposal from a private company, Red Speed USA, of Chicago, Ill., to install cameras at specific intersections and to issue tickets to the people listed on the tag registration as the owners of the autos that failed to stop at traffic signals. The company would issue $100 fines for civil violations and would pay the city $55 from each ticket.
After the council nixed the proposal, Joplin police conducted a traffic enforcement campaign to call attention to red-light violations. Officers stationed at various points on Range Line Road wrote 17 tickets in a few days. The department had written 73 tickets in the months of January and February last year.
Joplin’s assistant public works director, Jack Schaller, said Tuesday that the city is working with the Missouri Department of Transportation to decide whether to go to a system in which traffic signals would turn red in all directions for one or two seconds before changing to green for some lanes. He said half of the signaled intersections in the city belong to Joplin and half belong to the state.
That approach, he said, could prevent accidents caused by motorists running red lights.
About 30 Missouri communities use cameras to catch violations at traffic signals, but no other city relies on an administrative enforcement procedure like Springfield’s, said Scott Charton, a spokesman for American Traffic Solutions Inc., which supplies most of the traffic light cameras used in Missouri.
In Springfield, the city quit using its red-light cameras within hours of the high court’s ruling, said city spokeswoman Louise Whall. She said city leaders have not decided whether to start a red-light enforcement program under new procedures.
Whall said the ruling also may affect Springfield’s administrative procedure for handling other municipal ordinances, including tickets for alcohol violations or dangerous buildings.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Joplin lights
Joplin’s yellow lights are set to last three or four seconds, depending on posted speed limits, said Jack Schaller, assistant public works director. That is consistent with recommendations by the National Motorists Association Foundation.
Carthage, Jasper County
Court throws out red-light camera system
- Carthage, Jasper County
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Carthage attorney, reformer of revenue department, dies
James R. Spradling, a Carthage attorney who was noted for his reform of the Missouri Department of Revenue in the 1970s, died at 5:50 a.m. Monday at McCune-Brooks Regional Hospital.
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Bondswoman charged with false imprisonment
A bail bondswoman from Carthage is facing a charge of false imprisonment for allegedly attempting to put a man in jail without a judge’s order, then taking him home and handcuffing him to the banister of a staircase until a friend of the man paid her his bond money.
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Man’s last statement to be given to defendant
A judge ruled Monday that the Jasper County prosecutor must provide attorneys for Darren J. Winans with a videotaped statement co-defendant Matthew D. Laurin made about the Sheldon murders shortly before killing himself.
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Carthage proposes 1.6-cent rise in city property tax
A drop in the assessed value of Carthage real estate will translate to an increase of about 1.6 cents in the city’s proposed property tax rate.
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Open house to celebrate projects at courthouse
Projects completed last year at the Jasper County Courthouse will be celebrated in ceremonies Thursday in the courthouse lobby.
County officials will join representatives of local chambers of commerce and others for a ribbon-cutting and open house to mark the opening of a Route 66 display in the lobby and a new “peace star” atop the building. -
State budget cuts reduce county funds
County officials are bracing for more state budget cuts to translate into a loss of county revenues.
In an effort to balance Missouri’s budget, the state earlier this year cut the amount it reimburses county assessors for work to determine property values. The budget approved by lawmakers for fiscal 2011 calls for cutting the amount the state reimburses counties to house prisoners bound for state lockup. -
Jo Ellis: County home to rare yellowwood tree
In late spring, drifts as white as snow fill the gutters and curbs on the east side of the Jasper County Courthouse. It isn’t snow, of course; it’s the fallen petals of the yellowwood tree that grows squarely in front of the door to the Jasper County Extension office.
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Jasper County Commission gets building project update
Plans to close out one building project and start another were reviewed by the Jasper County Commission last week.
Darieus Adams, Western District associate commissioner, met Thursday with officials of the firm who designed a $292,400 project to upgrade the lighting and make other changes to make four county-owned buildings more energy efficient. -
Two men running for associate judge in 39th Circuit take case to court
Two men running for associate judge in Missouri’s 39th Circuit began battling it out in a Jasper County courtroom this week.
Jasper County Circuit Judge Gayle Crane heard arguments Wednesday concerning the disclosure of documents sought by Robert “Bobby” George, Aurora, the current Lawrence County prosecutor. -
Unveiling ceremony celebrates CHS tiger
Kandy Frazier, Carthage High School principal, summed it up once the new addition to the CHS campus was unveiled Thursday.
The bronze tiger sculpture created by Carthage artist and sculptor Bob Tommey, she said, is the kind of work that would be found at a big university. - More Carthage, Jasper County Headlines
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