Traffic Technology TodayTraffic Technology Today
  • News
    • A-D
      • Appointments & Staffing
      • Asset Management
      • Autonomous Vehicles & ADAS
      • Awards
      • Cloud Computing
      • Congestion Reduction
      • Connected Vehicles
      • Covid-19
      • Cybersecurity
      • Data & Modeling
      • Deals, Acquisitions & Mergers
    • E-J
      • Electric vehicles & infrastructure
      • Emissions & Low Emission Zones
      • Enforcement
      • Event News
      • Funding
      • Incident Detection
      • Infrastructure
      • Intersections & Traffic Signals
      • ITS
    • K-S
      • Legal / Government Regulation
      • Machine Vision / ALPR
      • Mapping
      • Mobility as a Service
      • Multimodality & Micromobility
      • Planning, Testing, R&D
      • Public transit
      • Safety
      • Smart Cities
      • Smart Parking
    • T-Z
      • Tolling
      • Traffic counting & categorization
      • Traffic Management
      • Traveler Information Systems
      • Tunnels & Bridges
      • Variable Message Signs
      • Vulnerable Road Users
      • Weather systems
  • Features
    • Features
    • Opinion
  • Online Magazines
    • May 2025
    • March 2025
    • December 2024
    • September 2024
    • June 2024
    • Archive Issues
    • Subscribe Free!
    • > Tolltrans
  • Video & Audio
    • Video
    • Audio
  • Podcast
  • Events
  • Webinars
  • Technology Profiles
LinkedIn YouTube X (Twitter)
LinkedIn YouTube X (Twitter)
Subscribe >
Traffic Technology TodayTraffic Technology Today
  • News
      • Appointments & Staffing
      • Asset Management
      • Autonomous Vehicles & ADAS
      • Awards
      • Cloud Computing
      • Congestion Reduction
      • Connected Vehicles
      • Covid-19
      • Cybersecurity
      • Data & Modeling
      • Deals, Acquisitions & Mergers
      • Electric vehicles & infrastructure
      • Emissions & Low Emission Zones
      • Enforcement
      • Event News
      • Funding
      • Incident Detection
      • Infrastructure
      • Intersections & Traffic Signals
      • ITS
      • Legal / Government Regulation
      • Machine Vision / ALPR
      • Mapping
      • Mobility as a Service
      • Multimodality & Micromobility
      • Planning, Testing, R&D
      • Public transit
      • Safety
      • Smart Cities
      • Smart Parking
      • Tolling
      • Traffic counting & categorization
      • Traffic Management
      • Traveler Information Systems
      • Tunnels & Bridges
      • Variable Message Signs
      • Vulnerable Road Users
      • Weather systems
  • Features
    • Features
    • Opinion
  • Online Magazines
    1. May 2025
    2. March 2025
    3. December 2024
    4. September 2024
    5. June 2024
    6. March 2024
    7. Archive Issues
    8. Subscribe Free!
    9. > Tolltrans
    Featured
    New issue graphic
    May 7, 2025

    Read the new TTi digital magazine online now – May 2025

    ITS By Tom Stone
    Recent
    New issue graphic

    Read the new TTi digital magazine online now – May 2025

    May 7, 2025

    NEW TTi MAGAZINE! Read the March 2025 digital edition online now

    March 21, 2025

    Digital magazine – read the new issue of TTi online for free – December 2024

    December 12, 2024
  • Video & Audio
    • Video
    • Audio
  • Podcast
  • Events
  • Webinars
  • Technology Profiles
LinkedIn YouTube X (Twitter)
Traffic Technology TodayTraffic Technology Today
Enforcement

Thousands of drivers caught using a phone during first week of Australian program

Adam FrostBy Adam FrostDecember 20, 20193 Mins Read
Share LinkedIn Twitter Facebook Email

In Australia, Transport for New South Wales (TfNSW) has revealed that thousands of motorists have been caught illegally using their phone while driving during the first week of the NSW Government’s mobile phone detection camera program.

During the first week of operations, from December 1-7, a total of 3,303 drivers were caught breaking the law by fixed and mobile trailer-mounted cameras at various locations across the state. Overall, the camera units carried out 773,532 vehicle checks on Sydney’s motorway network. The NSW Government’s new safety program comes after a six-month trial of the Heads-Up camera system developed by Australian technology company Acusensus. The camera pilot between January and June identified over 100,000 drivers illegally using a mobile phone while driving from the 8,500,000 vehicles checked.

For the first three months of the new enforcement program, until the start of March 2020, drivers caught by a mobile phone detection camera will receive a warning letter. When the warning phase ends, the penalty for offending drivers is five demerit points and a A$344 fine (US$233), rising to A$457 (US$310) in a school zone, with 10 points added during double demerit periods. The mobile phone detection camera program will progressively expand to perform an estimated 135 million vehicle checks on NSW roads each year by 2023.

 

“These drivers captured by the cameras should count themselves lucky to be only receiving a warning letter. At 60km/h (37mph) if you look at your phone while driving for just two seconds, you travel 33 metres (108 feet) blind; it’s dangerous, it’s stupid and it needs to stop,” said NSW’s Minister for Roads, Andrew Constance. “Around 500 drivers a day are getting pinged by these cameras doing the wrong thing. With double demerits starting Friday, we need drivers to get the message and get off the phone, otherwise they risk killing themselves or someone innocent on our roads. I’d like to thank drivers doing the right thing, we have seen a reduction in the noncompliance rate by two thirds since we first trialled the technology earlier this year.”

The executive director of transport at NSW’s Centre for Road Safety, Bernard Carlon, said, “Independent modelling shows the latest addition to the Government’s road safety program could prevent around 100 fatal and serious injury crashes over five years. We need to see a steep behavioural change from motorists to save lives. While drivers caught on camera get a warning now, NSW Police will continue to issue fines for illegal mobile phone use as part of their regular operations.”

 

Share. Twitter LinkedIn Facebook Email
Previous ArticleIteris to provide traffic engineering services for major California transit project
Next Article Hyper-fast Orin SoC powers Nvidia’s latest software-defined AV platform
Adam Frost

Adam joined the company in 1994, and has been News Editor of TTT since 2009. In his other role as Circulation Manager, he helped create the original Traffic Technology International distribution list 23 years ago, and has been working on it ever since. Outside of work, he is a keen fisherman, runs a drumming band, and plays an ancient version of cricket.

Related Posts

Enforcement

AppyWay launches new unified platform for all core traffic management tasks

April 9, 20252 Mins Read
Aerial Photo of Waikiki, Honolulu, Oahu, Hawaii at Dawn
Enforcement

Hawaii automated speed enforcement goes live

March 6, 20252 Mins Read
Enforcement

Podcast 47: MAV System’s game-changing new ANPR camera

March 3, 20251 Min Read
Latest Posts
Fibes Exhibition Centre, Seville

EXCLUSIVE: ITS European Congress Guide

May 9, 2025
New issue graphic

Read the new TTi digital magazine online now – May 2025

May 7, 2025

Adept Live Labs 2 launches pledge to drive decarbonisation across UK highways

May 7, 2025
FREE WEEKLY NEWS EMAIL!

Get the ‘best of the week’ from TrafficTechnologyToday.com direct to your inbox every Thursday


Supplier Spotlights
Our Social Channels
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • LinkedIn
Getting in Touch
  • Free Email Newsletters
  • Contact Us
  • Meet the Editors
  • Supplier Spotlight

Upcoming Events

May 19
May 19 - May 21

ITS European Congress – Seville 2025

May 21
May 21 - May 22

Traffex

Jun 17
June 17 - June 19

Intertraffic Americas – Mexico City 2025

View Calendar
© 2023 Mark Allen Group Ltd | All Rights Reserved
  • Cookie Policy
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.