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CAR SPIES
Cars will spy on each
other to catch drivers trying to evade road tolls under a
scheme being proposed to enforce nationwide congestion
charging. More than a million vehicles would be fitted
with cameras to photograph the numberplates of those who
failed to pay. The Government is planning a
pay-as-you-drive system under which fuel duty
and road tax could be replaced by tolls for each mile
travelled.
The rates would vary according to the level of
congestion, with drivers paying £1.34 a mile on the
busiest routes but only 2p a mile on quiet roads. A
satellite tracking device in each vehicle would monitor
its movements to ensure that the appropriate rate was
being deducted from the drivers pre-paid account;
but ministers have acknowledged that concerns over
privacy remain a significant stumbling block.
Motoring groups liken the system to having Big Brother
sat in the passenger seat, watching where each driver
goes. But a team of Cambridge University scientists has
designed a way to enforce road tolls that does not
require records to be kept of every drivers
movements. At least 10% of cars, including more than a
million police and local authority vehicles, would be
equipped with cameras capable of identifying
numberplates.
The spy cars would use radio signals to check
whether the car driving in front had paid the toll for
the road on which they were travelling. If the spy car
failed to detect a digital receipt, it would photograph
the numberplate and store the image, together with the
location and time, on an onboard computer. The data would
then be transmitted to one of the roadside receivers that
would be positioned every few miles across the network.
The enforcement authority would be likely to receive
several reports about the same driver, allowing it to
build up a convincing body of evidence of evasion before
issuing a penalty. A single detection would probably be
ignored as it could be the result of a technical error.
The authority could decide to take action only when it
received five or more reports from different spy cars
about the same vehicle.
Robert Harle, research associate at Cambridge
Universitys Computer Laboratory, said that drivers
who had not paid would escape detection on some journeys
because they would not encounter any spy cars. But
that would not matter because it would only tend to
happen when a driver was on empty roads. As the whole
purpose of the charging system is to tackle congestion,
the enforcement needs to be fully effective only on busy
roads," he said.
While the detection system would operate automatically
without the drivers involvement, Mr Harle
acknowledged that incentives would be needed to persuade
private motorists to have it fitted to their cars. He
said that the computer at the heart of the system could
be adapted to include other functions, say, playing DVDs
or providing satellite navigation. There will be
plenty of volunteers when drivers realise all the other
benefits, he said. (Source: Times Online)
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