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Signage will watch for speeding drivers

Norfolk invests $63,500 in solar-powered technology

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Local motorists will soon receive electronic reminders to respect the posted speed limit.

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After months of lobbying by the Norfolk OPP and the Norfolk Police Services Board, the county has agreed to invest in electronic speed-watch technology.

Most by now are familiar with roadside signs telling motorists how fast they are travelling and whether they are within the posted limit.

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A large electronic trailer has appeared on occasion in problem areas of Norfolk in recent years. The Norfolk OPP borrowed this from a neighbouring detachment.

At Tuesday’s meeting, Norfolk council agreed to buy a trailer along with six smaller, post-mounted units that serve the same purpose.

“Other municipalities are way ahead of us in having this signage on their highways,” Delhi Coun. Mike Columbus said.

The total value of the expenditure is $63,500.

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Norfolk’s PSB and the Norfolk OPP would like the county to invest in another 24 pole-mounted speed monitors over the next four years. Council, however, has put that on hold until it reviews the county’s road-safety needs.

For Insp. Joe Varga, chief of the Norfolk OPP, this week’s expenditure is a step in the right direction.

Varga likes the electronic signage because it is interactive. Too often, he said, motorists are “mesmerized” by the driving experience and miss passive signage marking a change in the speed limit. Speed-watch signage, he said, snaps them out of it.

“Enforcement alone is not going to solve the speeding issue in the county,” Varga said. “We have to look at other measures, and one of these is the speed-watch signs.”

Speed-watch signs are solar-powered and programmable. Based on radar technology, the signage gives an instant read-out of an approaching vehicle’s speed and says whether it is above or below the posted limit.

Hamlet areas, school zones, construction zones, and areas where there have been complaints about speeding are primary candidates for placement. Part of the attraction of this technology is it can be moved around to problem areas as needed.

MSonnenberg@postmedia.com

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