Tickets for speeding in excess of 100 mph surge 87% amid coronavirus shutdown, CHP says

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With freeway traffic down significantly because of the statewide stay-at-home order, the California Highway Patrol said Wednesday there has been an alarming 87% increase in citations for speeding in excess of 100 mph.

The CHP’s message to motorists: Slow down.

In the month after the start of the stay-at-home order March 19, the CHP issued 2,493 tickets throughout California for speeding more than 100 mph. Officers wrote 1,335 tickets for that offense during the same period last year.

One motorist was arrested and charged with speeding, reckless driving and driving without a license after officers clocked him going 165 mph in a Cheverolet Camaro on Interstate 5 in San Juan Capistrano, an official said.

Caltrans officials believe the increase in speeding is connected to a reduction in traffic volume on state roads, which has declined by about 35% compared with this time last year.

“It is alarming to see the number of citations officers are writing for excessive speeds on California roadways,” CHP Commissioner Warren Stanley said. “Higher speeds can lead to much more serious injuries and significantly increase the chance of death should a crash occur.”

To get the message out, California’s 700 electronic highway signs are being programmed to display safety-related messages, including, “If you must travel do not speed.”

The reductions in traffic has also allowed Caltrans contractors to expedite improvement projects, and speeding motorists put road construction workers at risk, Stanley noted.

“Viewing less congested roads as an invitation to drive dangerously jeopardizes the safety of construction and maintenance crews who are working to maintain reliable access to our highways when people need it most,” said Caltrans Director Toks Omishakin.

MisanthropicZombie on April 23rd, 2020 at 02:31 UTC »

In Chicago it has died down some but in the first few weeks the highways were pretty shockingly empty and there were no cops around whatsoever so you would have people doing 100+ when the left lane was usually 80mph.

In retrospect if I were so inclined a few times I could have easily "never lift'd" from the on ramp to the off ramp 20 miles away without a rearview disco and no risk to anyone but myself and maybe some infrastructure or a fence if one part of the interchange was wet. It was like light 3am traffic at 10am, very surreal.

clutchthepearls on April 23rd, 2020 at 01:11 UTC »

I paid for the whole speedometer, I'm gonna use the whole damn speedometer!

RedMan542 on April 23rd, 2020 at 00:54 UTC »

Theres no traffic, and its amazing.