St. Charles County Councilman Cronin found himself
without any support from his fellow Councilmen when he attempted to effectively
derail the impact of a county-wide referendum on banning Red-Light
Cameras. Cronin had attempted to alter
the ballot measure to say it would only cover the unincorporated areas of St. Charles
County, rather than the cities which Red-Light Camera opponents had intended.
Councilman Cronin contends that the measure will result
in lengthy litigation between the County and the City of St. Peters, which has
threatened to sue the County if the measure passes. Carter says St. Peters may be less
enthusiastic about going against the will of the people since city residents
will be voting as well. "This is
not a fight between people who live in cities and those who don't. City residents in St. Peters have never been
given a chance to vote and express their popular will on the subject of
Red-Light Cameras. If they agree that
this is nothing but a money grab by elected officials and, as St. Peters' own
Police statistics showed, causes more accidents not less, St. Peters residents
may send their own officials a message in November," Carter explained.
Carter has sent out updates to tens of thousands of St.
Charles County residents on the issue and says he will be working hard to
educate voters prior to the November 4th election. "I'm hoping to organize a forum and
issue a challenge to the Mayor of St. Peters to debate the issue before the
press and public. This is the first
ballot test of Red-Light Cameras in Missouri.
If voters support the county-wide ban it will send a powerful message to
our elected Representatives and Senators that a statewide ban is needed,"
explained Carter.
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