News

Advocates lobbying for road safety cameras in Massachusetts

Photo: Metro Creative


BOSTON, MA (FRANKLIN COUNTY NOW) — Advocates from agencies around the state will gather at the Statehouse in Boston on Tuesday to support a bill called “An Act relative to traffic regulation using road safety cameras.”

The measure gives municipalities the option to set up cameras specific for enforcing speeding, red light running, school zones, and “blocking the box.”

Cameras only capture license plate image, not the driver or passenger or contents of the vehicles, similar to automatic tolling and parking enforcement already in place across the commonwealth. Personal data is protected and prohibitions are set against selling data or using it for other purposes. Data is only accessible to law enforcement with a court order.

As of January 2026, speeding is one of the leading causes of preventable crashes across the state. In 2025, there were 351 fatal crashes in the Bay State.

Results from road safety cameras in other states:
● Speed cameras: Studies have shown that speed cameras can reduce speeding by 20% to 70%, crashes by 5% to 70%, and injuries by 5% to 70%.
● Red-light / safety cameras: Studies on red-light cameras and other safety cameras show significant reductions in red light running and dangerous behaviors at high-risk areas, like bus stops.
● Overall impact: A study by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) found that camera speed enforcement systems can reduce crashes by 30% to 40%, showing that safety cameras are a proven tool to keep people safer on our roads.

Recent Headlines

2 hours ago in Entertainment

Trial that could lead to the breakup of Ticketmaster’s parent company gets underway

A high-stakes antitrust trial that could lead to the possible breakup of Live Nation, the parent company of Ticketmaster, got underway Tuesday in a case over whether the entertainment giant's dominance of the concert industry amounts to an illegal monopoly.

2 hours ago in Entertainment

Padma Lakshmi finds a new competitive kitchen with CBS’ ‘America’s Culinary Cup’

Padma Lakshmi is back in the kitchen with a knives-out cooking competition, and this time the stakes are higher — for the contestants and for her. The former host of Bravo's "Top Chef" lands on network prime time hosting and judging the CBS show "America's Culinary Cup," which boasts the largest cash prize in culinary television history — $1 million.

9 hours ago in Entertainment, Music

The Guess Who plan the band’s first official US tour in over two decades

Two principal songwriters of The Guess Who — the band that crafted the hit song "American Woman" — will tour America itself later this year for the first time in over two decades.

9 hours ago in Entertainment

Justin Timberlake sues to block release of police video from 2024 drunken driving arrest in New York

The pop star's lawyers argued in a lawsuit filed Monday against the village of Sag Harbor and its police department that release of the video would "devastate" Timberlake's privacy by revealing "intimate, highly personal, and sensitive details." They also said it would cause "severe and irreparable harm" to his reputation by subjecting him to "public ridicule and harassment."

1 day ago in Trending

Actor Shia LaBeouf arrested again on battery charge in New Orleans

Actor Shia LaBeouf, who was arrested and charged with battery after police say he punched several people outside a New Orleans bar earlier this month, was arrested again on Saturday and charged with one additional misdemeanor count of simple battery, court records show.