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    Turning 'em on

    Sugar Land loves its red-light cameras: Controversial, Houston banned system thriving in 'burbs

    Tyler Rudick
    Mar 21, 2013 | 2:29 pm

    While Houston's red light cameras were run out of town in 2011, drivers in nearby Sugar Land can expect to see more of the controversial ticket-issuing technology in April.

    The upcoming cameras at Highway 90A and Dairy Ashford mark the city's fourth set along with systems currently installed on Highway 6 at both U.S. 59 and Lexington as well as at West Airport and the Eldridge Parkway.

    Since cameras were installed in 2009, Sugar Land officials claim that traffic accidents decreased by more than 58 percent at camera-equipped intersections.

    For the first 30 days, offenders at the newly-equipped intersection will get away with a warning. Thereafter, it's a $75 dollar fine.

    The well-heeled suburb — which recently rejected a $5 million offer to rename itself Sugardaddie.com — initiated its traffic camera program in 2009 under the moniker "Safe Light Sugar Land." Officials claim that the system reduced traffic accidents by more than 58 percent at camera locations.

    The new installations come on the heels of recent success stories along 59 in Sugar Land, where city representatives say cameras have decreased accidents enough that law enforcement felt they could remove the systems at three intersections.

    “The purpose of traffic enforcement is to change driving behaviors and encourage motorists to comply with traffic laws," assistant city manager Steve Griffith said in a statement. "If everyone complied with these laws at all times, there would be no accidents.”

    Griffith also stressed the importance of how the cameras allow Sugar Land Police Department to concentrate on other matters, such as the city's growing problems with theft and burglaries.

    Meanwhile, the City of Houston continues to collect its outstanding red light camera fines, which totaled nearly $25 million when the system was official shut down in August 2011.

    Claiming recent decreases in traffic accidents, Sugar Land officials will install a new set of red camera lights at 90A and Dairy Ashford.

    red light camera, traffic lights, stop lights
      
    Arthurvolpe.wordpress.com
    Claiming recent decreases in traffic accidents, Sugar Land officials will install a new set of red camera lights at 90A and Dairy Ashford.
    unspecified
    news/city-life

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    Genie Is Out of The Bottle

    Texas cannabis industry fires back at Dan Patrick's push to ban THC

    Teresa Gubbins
    Dec 5, 2024 | 2:30 pm
    The THC limit in medical cannabis products is also increasing.
    Photo courtesy of TOCC
    A ban on THC would not be popular.

    Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick is launching a quixotic quest to ban legal THC: According to a release, Patrick is pushing legislation that would ban all forms of consumable Tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) from being sold in Texas.

    He's promoting Senate Bill 3, which would be carried by Sen. Charles Perry, R-Lubbock, and would ban all forms of THC.

    Patrick is unhappy with House Bill 1325, introduced by Rep. Tracy King, D-Uvalde, to bolster agriculture in Texas. It was passed by the Texas Legislature in 2019.

    Part of that bill allowed for the commercialization of hemp, which included un-removable non-intoxicating trace amounts of Delta 9 THC.

    “Dangerously, retailers exploited the agriculture law to sell life-threatening, unregulated forms of THC to the public and made them easily accessible," Patrick says in his release. "These stores not only sold to adults, but they targeted Texas children and exposed them to dangerous levels of THC."

    "Since 2023, thousands of stores selling hazardous THC products have popped up in communities across the state, and many sell products, including beverages, that have three to four times the THC content which might be found in marijuana purchased from a drug dealer," he says.

    It seems like the genie is out of the bottle: According to the Baker Institute, hemp in Texas is booming: From 2020 to 2023, sales of hemp-derived cannabinoids increased by 1283 percent, reaching a value of $2.78 billion last year.

    And efforts to reel it back in are basically doomed, they say.

    "While prohibition may seem like the simplest response, it is almost certain to fail — both in eliminating widespread access to hemp-derived cannabinoids and in protecting the public," they say.

    "As of April 2024, Texas had over 7,000 registered hemp dispensaries," they note. "More than 50,000 Texans are estimated to be employed through the hemp sector. A state ban would ruin this industry, but it would not reduce consumer demand for hemp-derived cannabinoids. Instead, consumers would turn to the illicit hemp market that would inevitably form in the wake of state prohibition. Products sold today in state-registered shops would still be available through underground supply networks that would reap billions in tax-free profits."

    They say that "a broad ban, even a poorly enforced one, would harm consumers more than the state’s current system."

    Meanwhile voters are supporting marijuana decriminalization efforts such as the one recently approved by the city of Dallas, as well as Austin, Denton, Elgin, Killeen, and San Marcos.

    Catina Voellinger, Executive Director of Ground Game Texas, a Texas group that has been advocating for decriminalization of marijuana, says in a statement that the legislation would turn back the clock to a more repressive time.

    “Instead of banning THC, lawmakers should focus on legalizing marijuana statewide, which would allow for cannabis to be safely regulated, and would prevent countless residents from being harmed by unnecessary arrests and prosecutions for possessing something that is already legal in 24 states," Voellinger says. "We’ve seen repeatedly that this is what Texans want – our marijuana decriminalization ballot initiatives in Dallas, Lockhart, and Bastrop won overwhelmingly this November.”

    Daryoush Austin Zamhariri, Executive Director of Texas Cannabis Collective, a group working to change cannabis laws, calls Patrick's endorsement of legislation that would ban all consumable THC products in Texas "tremendously out of step with the overwhelming majority of Texans."

    "Poll after poll has shown the citizens of Texas support legalizing cannabis and ending the failed policy of cannabis prohibition," Zamhariri says. "These attitudes have manifested in several campaigns to progressively decriminalize marijuana possession in cities across the state with bipartisan super majority votes through local ballot initiatives. We oppose SB 3 and look forward to working with our coalition partners at the 89th Legislature to bring common sense cannabis reform to the entirety of Texas.”

    marijuanapoliticsdan patrick
    news/city-life
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