A WA parliamentary question on notice requesting data on multanova speed camera usage, infringements, and staffing levels from 2003-2008. The response provides detailed monthly and annual figures for images taken, films cancelled, and operator numbers, with explanations for fluctuations in the data.

AnsweredQoN 3324Legislative Assembly
Asked
10 April 2008
Portfolio
Police and Emergency Services

QuestionView source ↗

(a) 2003;
(b) 2004;
(c) 2005;
(d) 2006;
(e) 2007; and
(f) 2008 (to date)?
(2) How many images were taken by multanova speed cameras for each month in:
(a) 2003;
(b) 2004;
(c) 2005;
(d) 2006;
(e) 2007; and
(f) 2008 (to date)?
(3) How many images were taken by multanova cameras for each month in:
(a) 2003;
(b) 2004;
(c) 2005;
(d) 2006;
(e) 2007; and
(f) 2008 (to date)?
(4) How many films from multanova cameras were cancelled for each month for each month in:
(a) 2003;
(b) 2004;
(c) 2005;
(d) 2006;
(e) 2007; and
(f) 2008 (to date)?
(5) How many multanova operators were employed (FTE and headcount) for each of the following years:
(a) 2003;
(b) 2004;
(c) 2005;
(d) 2006;
(e) 2007; and
(f) 2008 (to date)?

AnswerView source ↗

Answered
15 May 2008
Responded by
Minister for Police and Emergency Services
Response time
35 days
(1) Total number of speed-related infringements issued as a result of speed cameras.
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
373424
413553
369532
344928
371313
Notes:
Certain circumstances and auxiliary infringements have not been included, e.g. driver renominations and infringement revision, evidence of mobile phone usage, no seat belt, etc.
2008 data is partial and subject to change and therefore not comparable to previous years.
(2) Total number of images taken by speed cameras
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
Jan
94205
76027
94204
86777
56411
51060
Feb
81517
81314
83814
92745
53327
41093
Mar
87797
95631
68960
89722
55030
44267
Apr
85356
82942
69520
73420
42072
May
89213
84367
83575
66962
27566
Jun
75477
78005
71862
31569
22096
Jul
82790
87858
81734
43464
14582
Aug
87713
94915
61722
38110
28536
Sep
70049
84351
59479
44263
34910
Oct
64063
73277
84941
44410
37592
Nov
75121
86034
94184
45771
44137
Dec
82395
101371
84590
51374
52034
Total
975696
1026092
938585
708587
468293
136420
Notes:
The decrease in the numbers of images taken by speed cameras mid 2006 is directly related to the decrease in number of vehicles monitored by speed cameras - this is attributed to both the use of sped cameras in the testing of the Infringement Image and Processing System as part of the CAP Speed Project in the final quarter of the financial year, and changes in the operational deployment of speed cameras that impacted on the volume of traffic monitored. This has included increased deployment of speed cameras in Regional WA.
(3) This question is a duplicate of question 2.
(4) Total number of cancelled speed camera films
2005
2006
2007
2008
Jan
31
14
75
69
Feb
25
25
114
61
Mar
24
64
103
Apr
60
222
192
May
19
57
93
Jun
27
164
99
Jul
34
98
96
Aug
54
75
99
Sep
60
70
56
Oct
45
71
57
Nov
35
93
62
Dec
29
57
76
Total
443
1010
1122
130
Notes
"Cancelled speed camera films" describes the number of rolls of film that have been cancelled, NOT the number of images.
Additional Notes:
The statistics are preliminary and subject to revision.
Sources:
Infringement and image statistics extracted from Traffic Enforcement and Crash Executive Information System (TEACEIS) and Infringement Image Processing System (IIPS) on 17/04/08.
Cancelled film data supplied by the Infringement Management Unit, WA Police (18/04/08)
(5) Total number of Camera Operators
Date
Actual FTE
Headcount
30 June 2003
23
23
30 June 2004
31
31
30 June 2005
38
38
30 June 2006
42
42
30 June 2007
23
23
31 March 2008
37
37
Notice: This document is created or edited using unregistered or evaluation copy of rtLib valid for testing or development purposes only. To use it for productive or any other purposes please register it. You may purchase the license on
http://www.rtlib.com

Explore WA Government Data

Search the full archive in the free dashboard, or query programmatically via API.

Explore more