Councillor to Premier, on speed cameras: 'Public safety must never become a casualty of politics.'

A sign warns of speed camera installation coming to the area of Forest Heights Collegiate Institute in Kitchener, along Fischer-Hallman Road. (Christine Clark / 570 NewsRadio).
A sign warns of speed camera installation coming to the area of Forest Heights Collegiate Institute in Kitchener, along Fischer-Hallman Road. (Christine Clark / 570 NewsRadio).

A Region of Waterloo councillor who recently put forward a motion to pause new speed cameras because Premier Doug Ford wants to get rid of them anyway, is now urging the Premier to reconsider.

Councillor Colleen James posted a video message on Instagram, Thursday, about Ford’s response to 22 mayors and regional chairs calling for compromise on automated speed camera policies, not an outright ban.

Those mayors included Waterloo’s Dorothy McCabe, and Cambridge’s Jan Liggett.

James said she’s read Ford’s response from earlier this week to those 22 leaders, and she says it was “both disappointing and deeply concerning for communities like ours in the Region of Waterloo.”

She went on to say, “Public safety must never become a casualty of politics. From the start, many municipals leaders, mayors, and councillors have been clear: speed cameras are not about revenue, they’re about saving lives.”

Ford has recently and consisistently called speed cameras a cash grab, and has instead proposed funding to other traffic calming measures. It was his own government that first approved of such cameras several years ago.

But James said, “Mr. Premier, leadership means collobaration. You have the opportunity to refine a program that works, not dismantle one that protects lives”

James wrote on her post: “Let’s come together to create a fair, province-wide framework that prioritizes safety, consistency, and community confidence. Residents across Waterloo Region have made it clear: they want safer streets, slower speeds, and stronger accountability.”

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