Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson plans to add 50 new speed cameras to city streets during the coming year to add $11.4 million from fines and fees to his deficit budget.
CHICAGO (WLS) -- The Chicago Department of Transportation is installing fifty new speed cameras this year. They will be installed on a rolling basis throughout the year. Their locations are not being disclosed right now. That won't happen until the cameras are about to be activated.
Speed cameras are all over Chicago, and now, there are going to be even more. A total of 50 more speed cameras are coming this year. Some people welcome the cameras as means of making the roads safer. But one Chicago alderman — while he approved one requested by the residents of his ward — is still not a fan.
Over the course of the year, Chicago’s Department of Transportation will install an additional 50 speed cameras throughout the city, bringing the total number to more than 200. WGN's Dana Rebik reports on the story.
Investing in infrastructure, clean water, and roads is an investment in public safety. It is not a question of if we invest in these projects, but when. The time is now.
"Any action to rectify and ensure the highest safety standards will be taken." Neither the Chicago Department of Transportation nor the Chicago Department of Aviation immediately returned NBC Chicago's request for comment. The incident comes after several ...
Gia Biagi made her name building parks. Now, she’s leading the department that oversees more than 145,000 miles of roads, 7,000 miles of railways, 1,000 miles of waterways and 26,000 bridges. In
The city’s Department of Transportation confirmed this week that it is “actively working” to install the 50 cameras this year but declined to share the locations.
CHICAGO (AP) — President Donald Trump's administration is backing off its demand for an extra layer of federal scrutiny whenever states seek even minor changes to their transportation plans, after the rescinded requirement sparked concern that some payments for roads, bridges and transit would be delayed or even halted due to policy differences.
The ABC7 I-Team has learned an enforcement snafu is putting the brakes on a new law designed to help crack down on motorists pulling off on the shoulders of busy roadways around O'Hare Airport to wait for flight arrivals.