The ruling allows Springfield leaders to again use red light cameras again after the city shut them off because they believed the restrictions were too costly to follow. City Manager Jim Bodenmiller said Wednesday he plans to review the ruling with commissioners before they decide whether to turn them back on.
READ MORE: Judge rules against Springfield in red light camera case
“While I’m pleased with the supreme court ruling today, we still do not plan to take actions or steps immediately to turn the cameras back on,” Bodenmiller said. “Our commission wants to have a full understanding of the law.”
Springfield had used red light cameras for nearly a decade when the city shut them off because of the new regulations that required an officer to be present for a driver to receive a citation. Under the state law, officials in Springfield estimated they would have to hire at least 42 officers to run its 17 cameras at 10 intersections.
Springfield also sued the state and the Ohio Supreme Court agreed to hear it but that case was put on hold pending the outcome of the Dayton lawsuit.
The city of Springfield issued about 77,000 citations between 2006 and 2015, collecting about $3.4 million in fines.
Crashes at intersections with cameras were cut in half.
“This was a safety issue for us,” Mayor Warren Copeland said.
RELATED: Judge rules against Springfield in red light camera case
The court’s ruling is a win for municipalities, who have seen their right to home rule steadily eroded in recent years, said Kent Scarrett, executive director of the Ohio Municipal League. But he cautioned the fight isn’t over.
“I don’t know if they’re going to appeal,” Scarrett said of Ohio legislators. “But I think we will probably see more legislative language that will try and in other ways preempt the ability of our cities and villages to manage these police power issues and specifically the red light camera.”
MORE: Springfield won’t follow Dayton, plans to keep red light cameras off
Some state lawmakers have already vowed to shut the devices down again.
State Rep. Bill Seitz, R-Cincinnati, the architect of the law declared unconstitutional, said the ruling only applies to home-rule cities and remains in place for Ohio’s 1,300 townships and 88 counties as well as villages. When lawmakers return from summer recess in September, Seitz said they’ll consider requiring photo-enforcement tickets go through municipal courts instead of an administrative process.
The state may withhold local government fund money from cities that receive money from traffic cameras, Seitz said.
“Since they’re getting money that way, they obviously don’t need our money,” he said. “I think those two things would have a very salutary effect in taking the profit out of the policing for profit equation and render the decision today a Pyrrhic victory for those folks like Dayton and Toledo that think they are above the law.”
DETAILS: Ohio Supreme Court to debate red light camera laws
Dayton challenged three parts of the state’s law. That included language that a police officer be posted at each operating camera, that cities conduct a three-year traffic study before deploying a camera, and that speeders be given leeway of 6 miles per hour over the limit in a school zone and 10 miles over elsewhere.
Bodenmiller said the court’s decision was a win for cities, regardless of whether city commissioners decide to use the cameras again.
“It’s fine for the state to say you can’t turn right on red without stopping,” Bodenmiller said. “But how we enforce that is up to us and that’s kind of where they overstepped their bounds in my opinion.”
RELATED: Dayton plans to bring back speed, red-light cameras
Jerry Taylor, a Springfield resident, has mixed feelings about the use of red light cameras. He’s never received a ticket from a speed or red light camera and believes they likely prevent crashes.
“It’s good for safety,” he said. “But not having a cop there to oversee it is what everybody’s mad about.”
Scarrett argued numerous state laws in recent years have stepped on the home-rule rights of municipalities. Similar disputes have ranged from cell tower location regulations to minimum wage laws to where a pet store gets its puppies due to concerns about puppy mills.
“That’s a dangerous conversation,” Scarrett said. “It’s growing the size and scope of the state government. It’s eclipsing the authority of our communities and its eclipsing the will of the people in our communities who have the directive interaction with their legislative councils.”
Staff Writer Laura Bischoff also contributed to this report.
Staying with the story
The Springfield News-Sun has provided extensive coverage of red light cameras since Springfield’s program began more than a decade ago, including stories digging into the money generated by them, the effect on crashes and lawsuits challenging new restrictions on their use.
By the numbers:
77,000 — Red light camera citations issued by the city since the program started
51 percent — Reduction in crashes at intersections with cameras after the devices were installed
$3.4 million — Fines from red light cameras collected since Springfield installed them between 2006 and 2015.
Source: City of Springfield