State Police Shortage Stalls Vermont Program

 Kellen Cloud’s line of work has always been dangerous.



For the better part of the past two decades, Cloud has worked at Green Mountain Flagging, a company that st


ations traffic controllers at construction sites around the state. He recalled when a coworker had their body pushed b


y an impatient driver, and when another had to jump out of the way of a truck that would not slow down.


“You have to be a little crazy to do this job,” he said with a laugh, during an interview last month at the company’s headquarters in Williston.


In recent years, though, Cloud said his job has gotten noticeably more dangerous. People seem to be driving mor


e recklessly than in the past, he said — something data suggests could be a lingering impact of the Covid-19 pandemic. Mea


nwhile, data also shows more people are injured or killed in work zones today than a decade ago.


It’s a concern that led Cloud, along with many others in the state’s construction industry, he said, to support a st


ate plan aimed at bolstering speed enforcement in work zones using relatively new technology: automated cameras.


The program, which Gov. Phil Scott signed into law in May 2024, would deploy cameras at a small numbe


r of highway work zones around the state over a period of 15 months


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. The cameras would capture photos of the license plates of cars going at least 10 miles per hour over the posted sp


eed limit. After a review by a police officer, speeding drivers would be mailed a warning notice, and if they offended again, could face civil fines.


Under the law, the state was required to start a public outreac


h campaign about the use of the cameras on April 1, 2025, with a pilot taking effect July 1. But the program — which alread


y exists in some form in more than 15 other states — has yet to materialize.


Vermont Agency of Transportation leaders have said they could not meet the pilot’s deadlines because no la


w enforcement agency has yet raised its hand to help out. Even though the cameras are automated, under the leg


islation creating Vermont’s program, a police officer must review the images the cameras collect and send out citations.


That delay has frustrated some legislative leaders in recent months. They’ve criticized Scott’s administration


for failing to implement a program the administration supported — especially when there’s often little consequ


ence for speeding through work zones now.


That’s because while police officers typically park near construction sites with their cruisers’ lights flashing, they’re


encouraged to remain at their posts rather than leave to chase down a speeder, several state officials said.


Joe Flynn, Vermont’s transportation secretary, said his agency is committed to getting the pilot program underwa


y, even though it will be on a slower timeline than the Legislature dictate


d. He said officials are confident the cameras could change drivers’ behavior; data from Pennsylvania, for insta


nce, shows speeding in work zones has dropped by 37% since that state first deployed a similar automated system five years ago.

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