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相信警察开超速罚单有奖金的,请看一下这个:
Where does your speeding fine revenue go?
In Queensland, the government has stated that any money collected as a result of speeding fine revenue is required to be reinvested in road safety programs. One of them is the flashing school zone signs, a program dedicated to delivering signage in areas with a crash history, high-level traffic and higher speed limits.
In New South Wales revenue from speeding fines was reinvested into the Community Road Safety Fund to support other road safety initiatives. Recently there have also been calls to reform the scheme due to a spike in revenue and out-of-date reporting.[8]
In Victoria, 100% of the revenue collected is passed on to the Better Roads Victoria Fund. Speeding revenue is invested into road safety projects and initiatives including road restoration, road surface replacement, improving roundabouts, overtaking lanes and bridge strengthening.
In Tasmania, the Road Safety Advisory Council works with the government on road safety policies and public education programs. Their current initiative, Towards Zero Strategy, aims to have zero serious injuries or deaths on Tasmanian roads from 2017-2026.
In Western Australia, the Road Trauma Trust Account receives 100% of the revenue and is managed by the Road Safety Commission. The commission aims to support new road safety measures and initiatives including the New Road Safety Strategy for Western Australia 2020-2030.
In South Australia, all funds collected through fines from speeding cameras are reimbursed to the Community Road Safety Fund and is used to improve road safety through education, initiatives, and enforcement programs.
South Australia’s Road Safety Strategy 2020 is titled Towards Zero Together. The initiative strives to reduce casualties during the decade by at least 30%.
In 2018 the Northern Territory launched Towards Zero, a five-year road safety action plan proposing harsher punishments for repeat speeding offenders, improving education, infrastructure and using point-to-point speed cameras. The plan aims to reduce the road toll to zero.
The Australian Capital Territory’s government is committed to their primary road safety initiative, Vision Zero. The initiative aims to have zero deaths or serious injuries on the ACT’s road transport network. |
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