Shoreline council approves Meridian Park Speed Cameras

Wednesday, April 1, 2026


By Oliver J Moffat

In a 6-1 vote at the Monday, March 30 meeting, the Shoreline City Council authorized the city's first automated school zone speed cameras at Meridian Park Elementary.

Last year, a city report found 1,031 speeders on average school days while children were coming and going to Meridian Park and the 20 mph speed zone lights were flashing. Alarmingly, 59% of those drivers sped by Meridian Park at over 30 mph while children were arriving and leaving school.

But, while neighboring cities of Edmonds, Lynnwood, Lake Forest Park, Kenmore, Bothell, and Seattle all have implemented school zone cameras, Shoreline had not.

City staff recommended a $130 base fine for speeders caught going above 24 mph with a $260 fine for speeders above 33 mph.
 
But the council voted 4-3 to lower fines to $50 for speeders going between 24 and 30 mph in the 20-mph school zone.


City staff estimated that each ticket would cost roughly $119 per infraction after accounting for operating costs, including vendor fees and court processing.

Staff warned the lower fines could result in a budget deficit, potentially requiring the city to subsidize the program with General Fund dollars.

Under state law, any revenue exceeding operating costs must be spent on traffic safety projects.

Under state law, fines must be cut by 50% for low-income speeders receiving public assistance.

Councilmember Keith Scully was the sole dissenting vote on the ordinance, and said the fines would disproportionately impact low-income drivers. 

Instead, he called on the city police department to step up traffic patrols at the school (his complete comments are available online).

The cameras are expected to be installed by the end of 2026, with tickets beginning in early 2027.


7 comments:

Anonymous,  April 1, 2026 at 7:10 AM  

Finally! Now expand to all of the schools.

Anonymous,  April 1, 2026 at 11:43 AM  

"fines must be cut in half for low income..." How can this even be constitutional?

Anonymous,  April 1, 2026 at 12:38 PM  

OK. One problem perhaps is solved. Now, let's talk about the hazardous and high revved up and erratic drivers coming and going from the Richmond Beach Saltwater Park on most warm evenings.

Anonymous,  April 1, 2026 at 5:32 PM  

Speed cameras are not cheap. With Meridian Park's history, I would expect theses speed cameras to pay for themselves.
Police officers are not cheap, either. I doubt we have paid for spare capacity. Isn't the King County Sherriff's department still hiring? Keith Scully appears to believe that manpower is already available for inefficient traffic enforcement.

Anonymous,  April 1, 2026 at 8:50 PM  

What's unconstitutional about that?

Anonymous,  April 2, 2026 at 12:57 AM  

Yes! I don't go there any more and it makes me mad. What about a group of us all going there earlier, taking all the parking spots to fill the lot so we can enjoy visiting, walking, reading, watching the sunsets.

IDC9 April 2, 2026 at 4:12 PM  

So for low income individuals, the fine would only be $25, $65, or $130 depending on how fast they were going? But the tickets will cost about $119 per infraction to administer, no matter what? This sounds like a recipe for creating a big budget gap for the city. While state law must certainly be followed no matter what, the city is doing itself a grave disservice by setting the fines as low as they are. They should be tripled, at minimum, for all drivers, regardless of income.

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