Showing contempt for citizens

Advertisement

Text size: small | medium | large

Gary Jacobsen
Published: July 21, 2008

“Bad officials are elected by good citizens who do not vote”
— George Jean Nathan

Members of the Board of County Supervisors (BOCS) show contempt for ordinary citizens in a number of ways, but none as egregious as their support for speed traps on county roads.

Whether or not county officials push bureaucrats at the Virginia Department of Transportation (VDOT) to establish sections of roadways that will ultimately become speed traps is determined by political
considerations, not by any concern for the safety of motorists or pedestrians.

There are many speed traps in the county, but I will discuss just one of them to illustrate this point.

The half-mile section of Smoketown Road between Minnieville Road and Rollingwood Drive is a notorious speed trap that has been enforced by as many as three county policemen at the same time (two
on motorcycles, with Chief Charlie Deane supervising). If this seems to you to be an extraordinary waste of police manpower, you are correct. But politics are at the heart of the matter; therefore the
expenditure of resources is irrelevant.

This particular speed trap exists in a roadway that has four lanes divided by a raised center median, no crosswalks, no stop signs, no traffic signals and no homes that face the road. To most people, that
would mean 35 mph, but politicians have pushed for 25 mph because (1) some residents who live on Jacks Drive complained it was difficult for them to make a left turn onto Smoketown Road during rush
hours; and (2) persons who live on Smoketown Road between Rollingwood Drive and Old Bridge Road (Lynwood area) are angry that motorists use Smoketown as a short-cut to get to Lake Ridge. The
theory seems to be that if you repeatedly punish motorists with traffic tickets for driving on this road, fewer persons will take it.

That has not happened, of course. The only thing the speed trap has accomplished is a general contempt for the police, for the politicians who encourage them, and for the highways engineers who
meekly approved an unrealistically low speed limit. The same can be said for a dozen or so other speed traps scattered about the county.

Members of the BOCS refuse to acknowledge even the possibility that most motorists are law-abiding folks. That is, the politicians mandate exceptionally low speed limits in some areas because they
think that drivers do not have enough sense to travel at safe speeds on all roads at all hours of the day. The truth is, however, that most folks do drive safely. They have no desire to create unsafe
conditions, either for themselves or for others with whom they share the road. Accidents sometimes occur, but more often than not they are due to inattention by a driver, not by speeding.

Even VDOT acknowledges, privately, that most people are safe drivers and therefore that speed traps are little more than expensive annoyances for motorists. VDOT usually follows the 85th percentile
rule, which is laid out in the Manual of Uniform Traffic Control Devices (MUTCD). This rule states that the natural flow of traffic on a road should be recorded and the speed limit set within 5 mph of the
speed that 85 percent of the vehicles are traveling.

But don’t expect the speed traps in Prince William County to be eliminated any time soon. The politicians have created them in response to perceived needs by small interest groups, including
homeowners, merchants, environmentalists and others.

Citizens could, of course, vote supervisors out of office, but history has shown they are unlikely to do that. Most people do not bother to vote. Those who do vote prefer the devils they know to the devils
they don’t know. Thus speed traps and other annoyances will be with us forever.

Source: http://www.ite.org/standards/speed_zoning.pdf.

To date, Gary Jacobsen has avoided being snared in a speed trap.

Reader Reactions

Posted by ( Godsaveus ) on July 28, 2008 at 11:27 am

Gary you lost this one, do not matter what arguments you want to use to blame the bad guys of PWC. Reduce the speed from 35 mph to 25 mph only for the sector between Trafalgar Lane and Grouse Ct. could be a real trap and give you the reason for your comment, but your poor judgment and your simple desire to smear the PWC administration goes beyond rationality . So please if you continue giving those nonsense arguments to justify your comments just make it worst for you.

Report Inappropriate Comment

Posted by ( Grant Gary Jacobsen ) on July 27, 2008 at 9:18 am

The 4-lane section of Smoketown Road is identical to Golansky Blvd and also Antietam Road in Lake Ridge. Golansky and Antietam are 35 mph, but Smoketown is only 25 mph because a former member of the BOCS insisted on the lower limit. Privately, VDOT officials have said the speed limit should be higher. Translation: it is a speed trap.

Report Inappropriate Comment

Posted by ( anonmom ) on July 24, 2008 at 4:49 pm

They don’t exactly hide the speed-limit signs at the “speed traps,“ so they’re not catching “innocent” drivers. It’s actually more of an IQ test, really. Sorry, your point is a loser here. Stop showing your usual contempt for citizens as well as the law.

Report Inappropriate Comment

Posted by ( Grant Gary Jacobsen ) on July 24, 2008 at 8:58 am

Some of you need to take Statistics 101. If this county were full of speeders, they would speed on all roads at all hours of the day or night. Speeding tickets would be evenly distributed, regardless of the roadway.

However, if the politicians select only a few locations, and mandate extremely low speed limits, then you have speed traps where cops can reel in otherwise innocent motorists with ease.

Report Inappropriate Comment

Posted by ( anonmom ) on July 23, 2008 at 4:41 pm

“In our county, about 70 percent of the speeding tickets are written at a dozen “prime” locations (i.e., speed traps). Go figure.“

Uh, Gary, it’s not a “speed trap” if you’re not speeding. Obey the law and there will be less need for enforcement in those areas.

Report Inappropriate Comment

Posted by ( mmarin ) on July 23, 2008 at 3:12 pm

The simplist solution (granted radical) would be to disenage all the safety systems we’ve built into cars.  Take away ABS, crush zones, bumpers, seat belts, airbags, avoidance systems, take it all away.

The more you ‘safe’ you make a car the more you desensitize drivers to the risks of driving.

A single speeding ticket or even multiple tickets will not save you from one day being killed by a speeder much like you one day may be killed by a drunk driver.  But, it makes you feel good that someone is giving out a ticket to ‘slow’ other people down.  It’s twisted logic that doesn’t work.  It’s like saying that since no speed limit in VA is higher than 75 than no car should be able to go faster than that speed.

Issuing out more tickets only increases county/state revenue it does not make the streets ‘safer’.

I agree with Gary on his assessment.  He’s got it spot on.

Report Inappropriate Comment

Posted by ( MikeG ) on July 23, 2008 at 1:57 pm

Gary, is it some sort of insidious plot, as you seem to suggest, or is it just another case of volume?  More impatient drivers means more speeders equals a greater need for enforcement in certain locations.  There are times I wish they’d install a “speed trap” on my street, which is used as a cut through between two other major roads through Manassas; I have seen commuters go down my street in excess of 60 MPH (speed limit is 25).  I suspect, because the speed limit in the locations under discussion is very low, this encourages those tending toward scofflawery to speed.  It’s only a problem, in my view, when you get caught, in that case, and it’s your own fault when you do.  How many times do people have to get ticketed before they suddenly realize its a “speed trap?“  Maybe the enforcement, and the “speed traps” could move on to other locations or enforcement efforts, if only the drivers would get the message and slow down.

Report Inappropriate Comment

Posted by ( Grant Gary Jacobsen ) on July 23, 2008 at 11:44 am

In our county, about 70 percent of the speeding tickets are written at a dozen “prime” locations (i.e., speed traps). Go figure.

Report Inappropriate Comment

Posted by ( anonmom ) on July 22, 2008 at 7:46 pm

“The truth is, however, that most folks do drive safely. They have no desire to create unsafe conditions, either for themselves or for others with whom they share the road.“

Let me guess, you work at home and email your drivel in to your editor, right? The “general contempt” you describe is actually for people like you who feel superior to law enforcement and, if given the chance, would drive at any speed necessary to get where you need to go, because your time is more valuable than my life.

I commute around people with your attitude every day, and if you’re not causing accidents with your speeding and weaving, you’re flipped over on the side of the road because of your excessive speed and keeping me away from my family for an extra hour.

Your column was nothing more than yet another opportunity for you to slam the PWC police and the BOCS. Oh, and the uninformed, misguided voters who either voted for the Supervisors or didn’t show up at the polls.

How about just slowing down? You might even save a little gas.

Report Inappropriate Comment

Posted by ( Godsaveus ) on July 22, 2008 at 3:58 pm

Any way, Smoketown is not an speed trap, speed limit was set at 25 mph from Minneville to Old Bridge Road and all around that residential area; if you want to take a shortcut just follow the law.

Report Inappropriate Comment

Post a Comment

The commenting period has ended or commenting has been deactivated for this article.


Tags relating to this article:

  • No tags are associated with this article.

Can't find what you're looking for? Try our quick search:



Email This Print This AddThis Social Bookmark Button RSS Feed Add to My Yahoo!

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement