
Speed cameras in place in Northern Colorado town as 30-day warning period begins
One of the speed trailers can be found on Collyer Street. Along with the machine, there are warning signs around the neighborhood, including a Traffic Laws Photo Enforced sign. This means slow down or risk getting a speeding ticket. If you receive the warning or ticket, it will be sent to your home, explaining how fast you are going and what you have to pay.
Automated speed trailers have been deployed around the City of Longmont to ticket speeders.
CBS
Longmont police say they are still working on the red-light cameras, which will work the same way. You will see them at intersections and highways, including:
Main Street or Highway 287
Pace Street
Ken Pratt Boulevard or Highway 119
Hover Road (N. 95th Street)
Airport Road (N. 87th Street)
17th Avenue
Mountain View Avenue
11th Avenue
9th Avenue
3rd Avenue
Pike Road
21st Avenue
23rd Avenue
When you speed through these areas, the camera will take a picture of the front and back of your vehicle, where the license plates are. You will see these cameras around neighborhoods, construction, and school zones, places where you see the worst speeding violations.
Pedestrians are always the ones who risk getting killed in crashes.
"If two cars are going 45 mph and they collide with each other, going in different directions at any intersection, one of them is going to get pushed into an area," said Longmont Police Chief Jeff Satur. "If you are a pedestrian at that intersection, there's potential you could be injured from that."
The warning period will end on May 29.

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