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Glenarden council records consensus to restore speed-camera enforcement, keep 35 mph on Bridal Seat Road; refunds and contract liability remain unresolved

AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

Glenarden City Councilors sought direction on whether to resume automated speed-camera enforcement at MD-704 and Bridal Seat Road after county correspondence said a 25-mph sign had been posted in error; staff said both camera sites are paused and asked whether to reactivate enforcement at the county’s 35-mph posting.

Glenarden City Councilors on the work-session agenda sought direction about automated-speed cameras on MD-704 (Baltimore-Washington Parkway corridor) and Bridal Seat Road after county correspondence saying a posted 25-mph sign had been erroneous.

Councilwoman Jones asked whether the cameras were operational and whether the council wanted to direct administration to reactivate them at the posted limit. City staff confirmed both camera sites were currently paused and said the administration needed council direction to resume enforcement. "Currently, they are not. There was correspondence sent to council, and we do need to get a direction from council on whether we want to reactivate...704," the city manager said.

Council members discussed three related decisions: whether the posted speed limit on Bridal Seat Road should remain 35 mph (the county…

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