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Traffic engineering outlines traffic‑calming tools and a phased school speed‑camera rollout for 2026
Summary
County traffic engineers described physical traffic‑calming devices, neighborhood ballots and a year‑one school speed‑camera pilot covering 12 schools (13 zones). Staff said cameras will be supported by a memorandum of understanding with the sheriff and by a public awareness campaign before enforcement begins in fall 2026.
Orange County's traffic engineering staff presented a detailed overview of traffic‑calming techniques and the county's planned school speed‑camera pilot during the TransMAC meeting on Sept. 11.
Gerald Marks of the traffic engineering division described a menu of tools — speed cushions, mini‑roundabouts, raised intersections, high‑visibility crosswalks, rectangular rapid‑flashing beacons (RRFBs), radar feedback signs and targeted rumble strips — and explained how the county balances vehicle‑speed reduction against emergency‑response delay. "For every one of the devices that we put in the road, there's a certain delay that's associated with that," Marks said, and he described earlier estimates that conventional speed humps could delay a large fire apparatus by about "30 seconds per device," a figure the county sought to reduce by switching to redesigned speed cushions with wheelbase gaps for emergency rigs.
Marks described the county's traffic‑calming process: residents or commissioners submit requests (311 is the preferred intake method), staff evaluates engineering criteria (with exceptions for school zones), and, if a physical device is warranted, staff conducts a homeowner…
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