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Is money driving automated school bus camera programs?Gotcha. That’ll be 250 bucks. Automated school bus camera systems are not necessarily new, but the technology is starting to ...
The district said during the 2023-24 school year, more than 9,100 citations were issued to drivers who illegally passed ...
PPS, which uses BusPatrol’s system, did not provide any information ... Nearly $4 million of that money went directly to the ...
The cameras are part of a new state law that allows school districts to record drivers who ignore a bus’s signs to stop.
A joint program between the city and the Sacramento Regional Transit District is fielding 100 buses with forward-facing ...
Gatekeeper Systems Inc. (TSXV: GSI) (OTC Pink: GKPRF) ("Gatekeeper" or the "Company"), a leader in intelligent video and data solutions for public transportation and smart cities, supports Transport ...
The union representing school bus drivers on P.E.I. is welcoming new federal regulations requiring new buses to be equipped with cameras that improve drivers' visibility of their surroundings.
Automated school bus camera systems are not necessarily new, but the technology is starting to pop up in school districts all over Maryland. And wherever these cameras go, money follows.
PPS, which uses BusPatrol’s system, did not provide any information ... Nearly $4 million of that money went directly to the school bus camera company and close to a $1 million more went ...
With tickets starting at $250 a pop, and thousands of violators a year, there are millions to be made. So where does all of that money go?
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