School Zone Speed Cams Set To Snag Orlando-Area Drivers This Fall

Speed cameras are about to become a regular feature in school zones across Orange County and the City of Orlando, with a wave of new photo-enforced tickets poised to hit mailboxes starting this fall. County leaders have voted to install devices at a dozen schools, while Orlando officials say they will start with warnings in mid-August, then flip the switch to full enforcement in late September. The twin rollouts follow a 2023 state law that opened the door for automated school-zone enforcement and helped spur similar programs across Central Florida.

Orange County’s Board of County Commissioners has picked 12 school zones for the first round of cameras, and staff told reporters they expect to add 32 more locations over the next two years, with the overall system projected to be active by January 2027, according to Spectrum News 13. The county is negotiating a contract with RedSpeed USA to supply and run the hardware and software, and the Orange County Sheriff’s Office will review each recorded incident before any notice is mailed, officials said. Drivers will first see a warning-only period, then the county plans to start mailing $100 civil notices to registered owners for qualifying violations.

Orlando is moving on a parallel track. The city’s Transportation Department says its school-zone cameras will begin operating in warning mode on August 11, with enforcement – meaning mailed notices and fines – scheduled to start September 25. The program stems from an internal speed study, and the city has awarded its contract to Verra Mobility. The department says a certified traffic infraction enforcement officer reviews each potential violation before a penalty goes out. City documents also break down how fine revenue is divided under state law, including $60 for the city, $12 directed to school safety and transportation, and $5 for crossing-guard recruitment, as outlined by the City of Orlando.

How the cameras work and who’s operating them

Orange County officials say the new units will rely on radar and lidar to spot vehicles exceeding the posted school-zone limit, then capture still images of license plates for review. The county is in talks with RedSpeed USA to operate the system, according to Spectrum News 13. The company has promoted potential integrations with third-party license plate tracking platforms such as Flock Safety, a selling point that has also caught the attention of privacy advocates, as reported by Tampa Monitor. Statewide reporting notes that RedSpeed is already one of Florida’s largest school-zone camera vendors and that drivers who contest their notices in other counties rarely win on appeal, according to WPTV.

What drivers should know

Under the 2023 state law, school-zone cameras come with strict ground rules. Signs reading “Speed Limit – Photo Enforced” must be posted where school zones begin, and cameras can only trigger a civil notice if a vehicle is clocked at least 10 miles per hour over the posted limit during set time windows tied to the school day. The registered owner must be mailed a notice within 30 days, including the date, time and location of the alleged violation, and then has about 30 days to pay the $100 penalty, transfer the notice to the actual driver, or request a hearing. The violation does not add points to a driver’s license and is not supposed to be used to raise insurance rates, although unpaid notices can be escalated into a higher-cost Uniform Traffic Citation, according to Florida Senate records…

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