Changes to ‘cash cow’ photo radar to focus on safety, not money
EDMONTON — Alberta Transportation Minister Brian Mason says it’s clear photo radar is being used as a cash cow by municipalities and he is implementing changes he thinks will fix that.
“It’s my intention that we are going to humanely put the cash cow down,” Mason told a legislature news conference Thursday.
Mason also released a third-party report showing that photo radar generates about $220 million a year in revenue while reducing collisions by about 1.4 per cent.
Municipalities keep almost three-quarters of that money and the rest goes to the province. There’s also a 15 per cent surcharge for a victims-of-crime fund.


