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News

Senate Invoice 415 proposes visitors cameras to chop fatalities throughout Nevada

By Miles Cooper April 1, 2025
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LAS VEGAS (KLAS) – Including visitors cameras is a scorching subject of dialogue amongst county and state leaders. Officers met on the Nevada Legislature Monday to try to go Senate Invoice 415 which might put additional eyes on the highway and maintain drivers accountable.

Susan Smith, misplaced her son, Jonny, six years in the past after a rushing driver hit him and his good friend on their means dwelling from faculty. His good friend survived, however Jonny didn’t. Smith, who’s now an advocate for roadway security, spoke at Monday’s Legislative session through Zoom. She stated she is happy to see the efforts being made.

“I think that it would work as a deterrent and we know that they’ll slow down because they want to avoid that ticket,” Smith shared with 8 Information Now. “In the session, they said that these cameras reduce traffic fatalities by 20% to 50%. That’s a lot and I feel like it could have prevented my son’s death.”

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‘Is there value in this technology?’ Sheriff needs pace, crimson mild cameras in Clark County

Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Division Sheriff Kevin McMahill, who was on the Nevada Legislature in Reno needed change after seeing numerous traffic-related deaths throughout the valley.

“I was not a proponent of traffic cameras until the last 10 years or so and the bottom line is I’m sick and tired of people dying on our roadways because of the bad behavior of other drivers,” Sheriff McMahill stated.

The newest deadly crash occurred in a single day on Martin Luther King and Owens, Monday morning. That crash marks the 43 traffic-related fatality in Metro’s jurisdiction this 12 months.

“I received a call at 2 a.m. that another individual crossing the street on a sidewalk was killed. The driver ran a red light and was speeding,” he added.

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As for these against the cameras, the ACLU of Nevada acknowledged that it will jeopardize folks’s privateness by gathering folks’s information.

“There are serious civil liberty concerns associated with this bill. Where is the data going to be stored? Who has access to the data and which agencies will it be shared with,” Government Director of the ACLU of Nevada, Athar Haseebullah stated. As well as, Republican State Senator Ira Hanson shared his opinion on the matter.

“I just don’t see the absolute need to have automatic red lights trying to slow down people. Obviously, with the guy who killed those seven people, he was going 105 in a 35-mile-per-hour zone. People like that will not be impacted by having red light cameras there,” he exclaimed.

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One other main criticism was that legislation enforcement was going to obtain a financial profit for cameras being put in, however in accordance with Sheriff McMahill, legislation enforcement, nor town or county will obtain any funds, however as an alternative the cash will return into engineering.

If this invoice passes, there will probably be a public data marketing campaign and a warning interval for drivers earlier than any tickets are despatched out.

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