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Driverless Cars Could Cripple Law Enforcement Budgets

colinneagle writes "Google's driverless cars have now combined to drive more than 700,000 miles on public roads without receiving one citation, The Atlantic reported this week. While this raises a lot of questions about who is responsible to pay for a ticket issued to a speeding autonomous car – current California law would have the person in the driver's seat responsible, while Google has said the company that designed the car should pay the fine – it also hints at a future where local and state governments will have to operate without a substantial source of revenue.

Approximately 41 million people receive speeding tickets in the U.S. every year, paying out more than $6.2 billion per year, according to statistics from the U.S. Highway Patrol published at StatisticBrain.com. That translates to an estimated $300,000 in speeding ticket revenue per U.S. police officer every year. State and local governments often lean on this source of income when they hit financial trouble. A study released in 2009 examined data over a 13-year period in North Carolina, finding a 'statistically significant correlation between a drop in local government revenue one year, and more traffic tickets the next year,' Popular Science reported. So, just as drug cops in Colorado and Washington are cutting budgets after losing revenue from asset and property seizures from marijuana arrests, state and local governments will need to account for a drastic reduction in fines from traffic violations as autonomous cars stick to the speed limit."

36 of 626 comments (clear)

  1. Next target, please by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So what's the next shakedown target in this game of "citizens vs government"?

    1. Re:Next target, please by TheCarp · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Nah, they already trumped all that with terrorism. Why do you think we are looking at pot legalization in the next few years? The fact that the entire stance on pot was based on lies has been known for a long time. The fact that its safer than alcohol is pretty much uncontroversial, so what changed?

      Very simply the war on terror came along and gave them a reason to justify budgets like never before. Just the other day my wife and I were walking past the local park and saw a picnic basket on a blanket, with nobody anywhere around (it turns out to have been left by the bridal party off taking pictures nearby).

      As we walked past my wife joked "Downtown there would already be police investigating". We didn't get another 10 steps before 3 uniformed officers crossed the street and began walking into the park.... they barely made it to the blanket as the bridal party came back....but seriously.... investigating picnic blankets now? This is police work now?

      Don't know if you noticed, but the fatherland security money is flowing into these departments like gangbusters. They are getting all manner of new equipment.....all without actually having to do anything dangerous like....breaking into people's homes to raid them. All they have to do is wave their hands and say words like "credible threat" and its like magic.

      The common sense reasons that drug prohibition is a dismal failure are nothing new, nothing changed except...they realized they didn't need it.

      --
      "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
    2. Re:Next target, please by TheCarp · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Riiiiiight.... because banning alcohol worked so much better. How about coming to their senses and respecting an individuals right to pursue happiness for themselves, whatever that means....and not outlawing the lifestyle choices of people who have done nothing to harm anyone.

      Dunno if you heard this one but "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness" have always seemed like perfectly fine inalienable rights to me, we should work on implementing that inalienable part.

      --
      "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
    3. Re:Next target, please by BilI_the_Engineer · · Score: 4, Insightful

      and not outlawing the lifestyle choices of people who have done nothing to harm anyone.

      Careful, or you'll leave the door open for someone to say, "But they harm me indirectly by making me pay more in taxes, or cause me emotional harm."

      The problem with that is that it can be applied to just about every non-essential activity in existence. Want to go ice skating? What if you get hurt and cost tax payers money? And your family will be so sad! Oh, and how about, "These substances make people more likely to commit crimes, so they should be banned entirely." I love that one.

      Yeah, there's no direct harm of others happening, but authoritarian assholes don't care about that. Land of the free, home of the brave.

      --
      These comments are my own and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of my employer or colleagues...
    4. Re:Next target, please by GTRacer · · Score: 5, Insightful

      [...] smoking in public [...]

      Oh how I wish they were able to feasibly enforce already-in-effect statutes regarding smoking where prohibited and for littering. I've long said that if I had Powerball money, I'd hire dozens of off-duty cops to do nothing but stand visibly at major intersections writing littering citations for smokers who throw their butts out (usually lit) rather than stuff 'em in the ashtray.

      I'm also sick of people who smoke all the way to the entrance to a store and drop the lit end at the threshhold cos they couldn't be arsed to put it in the provided ashcan / pole thing because it's off to the side of the entrance.

      </endrant>

      --
      Defending IP by destroying access to it? That makes sense, RIAA/MPAA. Go to the corner until you can play nice!
    5. Re:Next target, please by Grishnakh · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The war on drugs has turned large areas of the US into war zones
      and that is not a good thing.

      It is for the companies that are profiting by it.

    6. Re:Next target, please by niftymitch · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The war on drugs has turned large areas of the US into war zones
      and that is not a good thing.

      It is for the companies that are profiting by it.

      Well it is more than just companies looking for profit.
      It is a collection of interests that all profit one way or another
      from a common outcome.

      The ones that bothers me most are the morally correctitude driven folk that
      want to save a soul by outlawing sin.

      --
      Truth is stranger than fiction, but it is because Fiction is obliged to stick to possibilities; Truth isn't. Mark Twain.
  2. If vendor pays, mod your car by AlienSexist · · Score: 4, Funny

    "Gee Officer, I don't know why this thing is speeding"

    1. Re:If vendor pays, mod your car by sinij · · Score: 4, Funny

      Is this wise? They know where you live. Plus, your car can tow away itself.

  3. That sounds like great news by Andrio · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Saving the common people several billions a year would send nothing but good vibrations up the economic chain. Yeah, some cops may lose their jobs, but the billions extra that people would have every year means other jobs get created elsewhere.

    --
    The Internet King? I wonder if he could provide faster nudity.
    1. Re:That sounds like great news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      And direct and indirect public and private expenses due to traffic accidents will plummet saving much, much more than the speeding tickets could ever generate.

    2. Re:That sounds like great news by rudy_wayne · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Saving the common people several billions a year would send nothing but good vibrations up the economic chain. Yeah, some cops may lose their jobs, but the billions extra that people would have every year means other jobs get created elsewhere.

      There is no reason for any police to lose their job. Now the police can go back to doing what they are supposed to be doing. Traffic tickets aren't supposed to be a source of revenue. Every police office operating a radar gun and giving out traffic tickets is one less police officer available to go after real criminals.

  4. Translation: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    A study released in 2009 examined data over a 13-year period in North Carolina, finding a 'statistically significant correlation between a drop in local government revenue one year, and more traffic tickets the next year'

    The justice system and the police are primarily a revenue tool, to be unleashed as required, and controlled by factors other than the law.

    And people wonder why the police are largely treated with mistrust and disdain.

    If speeding tickets are just a shake down to pad out budgets, then the police are just flunkies, crooks and toll collectors.

    Fuck the police.

  5. There's no money lost... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There's no money lost here. Writing tickets didn't generate anything for the economy, other than perhaps the reduction in destruction of property. Clearly if driverless cars aren't breaking the laws, then that reduction is occurring in a much more efficient manner. Thus driverless cars are a net GAIN to the total economy, not a drain.

  6. Oh no! by jandrese · · Score: 5, Insightful

    But, but what about our conflict of interest? How are we supposed to operate a law enforcement and public safety organization without making revenue collection part of enforcement? How are we going to make the system unfair if we start eliminating inherent conflicts of interest? It's totally unfair to the government, we must punish those people for not breaking the law by making them pay a fine. I mean that's what we already do in some states (like mine) to punish people who try to help the environment by driving green vehicles.

    Seems to me that if enforcement actions are no longer necessary, then you won't need as big of a police force so the loss of revenue will be offset by not having to pay the salaries of all of those traffic cops. This is a non-issue.

    --

    I read the internet for the articles.
  7. So what...? by nine-times · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So law enforcement budgets will be lower, but the need for law enforcement will also be lower because you won't have to pay as many cops to run around patrolling the roads and writing tickets. Plus there will be fewer injuries and less property damage due to reckless driving, which means less economic waste.

    If law enforcement legitimately needs more money, then raise taxes and pay for it. People keep talking like it's bad for the economy to permanently address problems because we'll have fewer jobs consisting of temporarily patching those problems. It's just another variation on the "broken window fallacy".

  8. Kind of a problem ... by gstoddart · · Score: 4, Insightful

    current California law would have the person in the driver's seat responsible

    The car is either driverless, or it isn't. Either the car maker is responsible, or the owner is.

    But, really, who the hell is going to take liability for a device which says "I'm in charge of driving, you just sit there" right up until it goes into panic mode half a second before you impact with something and says "bummer dude, you're now in charge, evade quickly, liability transferred to passenger".

    Sorry, but if I'm sitting there reading my newspaper or whatever, I'm not controlling the vehicle. If I'm responsible for controlling the vehicle, then I will actually be controlling the vehicle.

    There's simply no room for a sudden shift in blame to the person in the drivers seat ... that makes no sense whatsoever.

    And if the car suddenly loses its marbles and mows down a bunch of schoolkids, you think the cargo/passengers suddenly own responsibility for that?

    This to me has always been the point at which driverless cars kind of fall apart, determining who is really in charge, and defining what that means.

    --
    Lost at C:>. Found at C.
  9. 700,000 miles without a citation? by Zed+Pobre · · Score: 5, Funny

    ... but have they tested it with a black dude in the driver's seat?

  10. Or properly fund the police force by sir_eccles · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You know through taxes.

    While you're at it how about properly funding schools through taxes rather than bake sales. Actually there are a lot of things that could benefit just by being properly funded by taxes.

  11. Law enforcement budgets are shams by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    More and more departments are buying more and more stuff they simply don't need. More and more departments are starting up SWAT teams they don't need. I'm sorry, a town of 5,000 simply doesn't need a special weapons and tactics unit. They just don't. Studies have shown that when departments start up special units, guess what? They want to use those units. These units get paid more. Police salaries are already too high in many places. Police administration salaries are ridiculously high, some over $250,000. Admin salaries should be capped below 100k. Police salaries should be capped at well under 100k. Public servants should never be getting rich. All public service jobs should be capped.

    For too long, police and cities have begun to rely on the "revenue" from tickets and parking citations. Parking I can see somewhat. But too many places have quotas that police have to meet with giving out citations rather than actually policing. All cities should require police to walk their beats for the first few years like they used to. Police have gotten away from this and as a result, the streets are worse, no one knows anyone else, and the police don't have a vested interest like they once did.

    Enough of this nonsense.

  12. Re:Just Tack on a Fee by NewWorldDan · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Taxing EVs makes perfect sense. They still need roads to be built and maintained.

    Adding an enforcement fee for a car that doesn't need enforcement is just absurd. If the number of tickets being written drops because there are no more speeding cars and reckless drivers, then just reduce the size of the police force. You don't need patrol cops any more and that's a good thing. Instead of employing people as patrol cops, they can instead work as artists or scientists or something that makes the world better instead of being a necessary evil.

  13. How do you pull over a driverless car? by HockeyPuck · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Would it pull over if it sees the blinking lights / siren behind it?

    Could you spoof it with a bunch of blinking xmas lights on the side of the road?

  14. Need more cops by linear+a · · Score: 4, Insightful

    $6.2 gigabucks/year is $300K/officer? That means 20,667 officers for the whole country. Methinks one or more numbers here is fudge.

  15. Re:Just Tack on a Fee by Totenglocke · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Why should a car that won't be committing traffic infractions pay a fee for traffic infractions? That doesn't even come close to making sense. That's like saying everyone who puts on a seat belt should pay an extra fee to make up for "lost revenue" from fewer tickets for not wearing a seat belt.

    --
    "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." ~Thomas Jefferson
  16. So? by azav · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The problem is "law enforcement" agencies using enforcement as revenue streams for cities and states.

    This puts law enforcement against the very people they are supposed to serve and protect.

    --
    - Zav - Imagine a Beowulf cluster of insensitive clods...
  17. Re:Just Tack on a Fee by lgw · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The vast majority of road wear is from heavy trucks, mostly bringing stuff like groceries that we all need. The only reason we have a gas tax is because it's taxable. That's the only government process for deciding what to tax: is it reasonably practical to tax X? Yes? Then we're just arguing about the rate.

    --
    Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  18. Re:Just Tack on a Fee by vux984 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Adding an enforcement fee for a car that doesn't need enforcement is just absurd.

    The way I read it, is its not an enforcement fee for a car that doesn't need enforcement. Its a $1000 tax on (I think) all cars to support local police municipal revenues so they can continue to pursue criminals where there isn't a net payoff at the end... like nearly all of them.

    Right now, it appears some of the revenue from traffic fines pays for the detectives investigating theft, arson, fraud, missing persons, murder, hunting with out a license, public urination, vandalism, and so on.

    Take away the traffic fines, and sure, you don't need nearly as much traffic enforcement, but they would also face a budget crisis within the rest of the department even if they let go of all the excess 'traffic enforcement' officers. Clearly that money to pay for regular police work is still going to have to come from somewhere. Raising local taxes is the obvious solution, whether its a tax-per-vehicle, or it gets added into property taxes, or whatever... its going to have to happen.

  19. Coming soon to a street near you by thewils · · Score: 4, Funny

    Driverless car pulled over by driverless cop car and given a ticket.

    --
    Once I was a four stone apology. Now I am two separate gorillas.
  20. Re:Just Tack on a Fee by Albanach · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The figures are nonsense. There are 18,000 law enforcement agencies in the U.S.

    Whoever did the sums appears to have confused agencies with police officers, since that gives $344,444 per agency.

    There are about 461,000 sworn officers in local police departments, giving a revenue per officer of $13,449. Local police officers only make up 2/3 of the total number of officers in the US, so the actual revenue per officer is even lower.

  21. Re:Just Tack on a Fee by Your.Master · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If we dropped human drivers, speed limits could be increased in many cases (sometimes the design of the road itself is the limiting factor, and new roads would assume driverless conditions).

  22. 6 billion at 300k per cop by way2trivial · · Score: 4, Informative

    is 20,773 cops NATIONWIDE, or 415 cops per state....

    --
    every day http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Random
  23. Broken system is broken. by khasim · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Right now, it appears some of the revenue from traffic fines pays for the detectives investigating theft, arson, fraud, missing persons, murder, hunting with out a license, public urination, vandalism, and so on.

    Which have nothing to do with cars. So why tax cars? Why not a general tax or a property tax or such?

    Putting a $1,000 fee for transportation will really hurt a lot of poor people.

  24. Re:Just Tack on a Fee by lgw · · Score: 4, Informative

    The wear from driving on roads is non-linear with vehicle weight. It really is the trucks that matter.

    --
    Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  25. Re:Just Tack on a Fee by tc3driver · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Wait just a moment here... Where does all our current funding go?

    I pay roughly 45% of my annual income in Taxes (split between state and federal), this is not including sales tax, fuel tax, property tax, and registration. With all of that added in (some via estimate) it is pretty easy to get that number to between 50 and 55%. I will never agree to a tax increase, ever. What we have here is a very poorly run situation, one where police are required to "tax" people from breaking silly laws and distracting the police from doing what they should be doing, stopping real crime.

    In a world where it takes an hour or more for police to come to my home after it has been robbed, yet you can drive around and see 10 speed traps, there is something wrong. Tickets should not be used as a source of income for the police departments, there should be no incentive for them to harass what are otherwise law abiding, tax paying citizens. "There is a person across town who is being murdered, and here is the officer writing a citation to someone who has never committed a real crime."

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  26. Re:Just Tack on a Fee by lgw · · Score: 4, Interesting

    While I can't quite say tailpipe emissions are a complete non-issue, there are only a handful of cities in the US where they even matter a little. ULEV and better cars really don't matter unless the air above your city never circulates with the outside world (which does actually happen in a couple of places).

    But that's all a dodge. Forcing other people to drive less has been core to leftwing philosophy for decades now. It all about tribal identification, not about anything practical. (Which is why the Tesla throws the right for a spin: it's a really nice American car, but then it's a hippie electric car that might as well come with a "Coexist" bumpersticker, such cognitive dissonance!)

    --
    Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  27. $300k number is garbage by jratcliffe · · Score: 4, Informative

    That $300k number is just absurd. $6.2 billion in fines, divided by $300k per police officer, would imply only 21,000 police officers. There are 34,500 officers in New York City ALONE. Wikipedia puts the total at around 930k sworn officers with arrest powers (765k state/local, plus 44k part-time, plus 120k federal).

    Even using only fulltime, and ignoring the Federal officers, would get you to about $8k, not $300k.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/L...