Public Transit, RTA | Smiths Medfusion 4000 pumpsのブログ

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Public Transit, RTA

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The Greater Cleveland Regional Transit Authority (RTA) operates some of the most visible vehicles on city streets. RTA leaders say their fleet of 415 buses have been driven more than 14 million miles along 69 routes.

There are 6,000 bus stops along those routes, with more than 39 million riders each year.

Safety is listed on riderta.com as one of the "chief responsibilities for its employees, riders and the public."

Earlier this year, WKYC sent a request to RTA leaders, asking for records of traffic camera citations issued to any of the vehicles in their fleet.

We asked for about citations issued during an almost 18-month period between January 2013 and June of 2014.

In that time period, six RTA vehicles were cited for running red lights. Twenty-seven more citations were issued for speed.

Thirty three times, vehicles being driven by RTA employees were caught breaking the rules of the road with battery like Digital LED-5001 Video Camera Light , Digital LED-5012 Video Camera Light , Digital LED-5080 Video Camera Light , Digital LED-5005 Video Camera Light , Digital LED-5010A Video Camera Light , Digital LED-5004 Video Camera Light , Digital LED-5002 Video Camera Light , Digital LED-5003 Video Camera Light , Digital LED-5006 Video Camera Light , Digital LED-5009 Video Camera Light , Digital LED-5008 Video Camera Light , Universal External Battery , 5600mAh Universal External Battery , 7800mAh Universal External Battery .

In many cases, the violators were bus drivers transporting people all across the city.

Not all of the RTA vehicles caught were buses. Some were what's described as "non-revenue vehicles."

These vehicles include maintenance trucks or cars driven for RTA business, but not necessarily carrying public passengers.

So, who pays the fine?

The RTA has a clear policy that requires the person driving the vehicle to pay up. This has been the RTA's policy about traffic camera violations going back as far as October of 2008.

After taking a closer look at the speed violations involving city owned vehicles, we found that the average speeder was driving 13 miles per hour over the posted limit.

In October of 2013, an RTA employee driving what appears to be a van, or non-revenue vehicle, was clocked at 43 miles per hour in a 25 mile per hour zone.

It happened in front of a camera in the 3200 block of Detroit Avenue just after 7 a.m.

What about buses? Plenty of these transport vehicles were also caught by the flashing cameras.

Another ticket from October 2013 appears to show a para-transit bus that was clocked going 42 miles per hour past the camera in the 7800 block of St. Clair Avenue.

This was 17 miles per hour over the 25-mile-per- hour zone.

11 more violations were given to drivers going from 13 to 16 miles per hour over the limit.

Of the 26 speed violations, at least 11 appear to be buses that may have been carrying passengers at the time they were caught.

Cameras also captured video of six RTA drivers ignoring or missing the red lights. When a driver is caught rolling through a red light, the video also rolls.

The "slowest" of the speeders were caught driving 11 miles per hour over the limit.

We watched the videos from the red light camera violations and, in some cases, we found public vehicles narrowly avoiding collisions with other cars on Cleveland streets.

Luckily, none of the traffic violations we reviewed led to accidents. Eight were clocked exceeding the posted speed limit by 12 mph.