|
McGuinty + Photo Radar = Grand Theft
McGuinty is a focking tool. It's bad enough that he lied about everything he would do once in office, but now he's going to steal money from the public with this photo radar crap.
I'm pissed.
itikia
From the Toronto Star website:
Photo radar back in the picture
McGuinty sees it as a cash generator
Introduced by NDP; killed by ToriesSystem targets speeding drivers
RICHARD BRENNAN
QUEEN'S PARK BUREAU
Premier Dalton McGuinty is paving the way for the return of controversial photo radar to generate money for the cash-strapped province.
"I have long been a supporter of photo radar," McGuinty said yesterday of the program designed to catch speeders. "It is a revenue generator, absolutely."
He later said in an interview photo radar is "on the table."
Attorney-General Michael Bryant said McGuinty "is committed to it. It's going to happen."
Since being elected in October, McGuinty's government has been desperately searching for ways to trim the provincial deficit, estimated to be more than $5.6 billion.
Photo radar was introduced in Ontario in 1994 under the NDP government of former premier Bob Rae, but the Mike Harris Tory government moved almost immediately to kill it following the 1995 election.
Harris was appealing to critics who complained vociferously the high-tech system to snap photos of speeders' licence plates was nothing more than a tax on motorists and an invasion of privacy.
Critics also complained photo radar did little to deter aggressive drivers from tailgating and lane hopping.
Photo radar, which features cameras mounted in unmarked vans, was in place just 11 months before the Tories pulled the plug.
But during that short time, 240,000 tickets were issued for fines totalling $16 million.
Under the system, the car's owner got a copy of the photo in the mail, along with a hefty fine, regardless of who was driving.
Photo radar was replaced with the "highway rangers," a select squad of Ontario Provincial Police officers formed to crack down on bad driving.
British Columbia Premier Gordon Campbell's Liberals scrapped photo radar in 2001, but it remains in place in some provinces, including Alberta and Manitoba.
NDP and Tory critics accused the Liberals of misleading voters by not talking about photo radar, toll roads or higher user fees during last fall's provincial election campaign.
"The Premier's done a complete reversal on photo radar. He wasn't a fan of it 12 years ago. All of a sudden now McGuinty embraces photo radar," NDP House leader Peter Kormos told reporters.
Indeed, a handful of high-profile McGuinty cabinet ministers are on the record as having denounced the move as a cash grab with no connection to public safety.
"All it's really done has made the coffers of the treasury swell with amounts of money that are starting to verge on the obscene," then-opposition member Monte Kwinter told a reporter in 1994.
Kwinter is now community safety minister in charge of policing in the province.
Also in 1994, current Management Board Chair Gerry Phillips labelled photo radar as "just cash machines.''
``They're a gold mine for the province."
Finance Minister Greg Sorbara told the Legislature during his opposition days in 1994 that "just for the benefit of the French-language translation service, the correct translation of `photo-radar' is `cash register' in English."
Jim Bradley, who is now tourism minister, echoed those sentiments at the time.
"I simply believe that the primary purpose of photo radar is without a doubt to get money for the Ontario government," Bradley told the Legislature.
Asked about photo radar during the 1999 election campaign, McGuinty said he had "no intention of putting it forward," but did say it was a possibility in the future.
Tory MPP Garfield Dunlop (Simcoe North) accused McGuinty of saying anything to voters to get elected.
"It's something that wasn't one of their promises, but obviously it's a form of a tax grab," Dunlop said.
"Mr. McGuinty is looking for a way that he can grab a few dollars here and there.
``Obviously it wasn't part of the platform."
"I think it's fairly clear he's misled Ontarians on a lot of different issues," Dunlop said. "Photo radar? I wouldn't be surprised if he did that as well."
Kwinter said he had not given the re-introduction of photo radar a moment's thought.
"I haven't turned my mind to it," he said, but conceded he is not against the idea.
|