Senate panel backs bill allowing automated bus-obstruction cameras with human review
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The Senate Transportation Committee reported SB 583 to allow localities to authorize bus-obstruction monitoring systems. Hayden AI and transit agencies said systems improve safety and reliability; witnesses described automated flags plus human adjudication and data-retention limits. The committee reported the bill (roll recorded).
The Senate Transportation Committee on Jan. 29 advanced legislation that would let local governments use automated camera systems to detect and enforce illegal parking or stopping in bus stop zones and bus lanes.
Sen. (patron) told the committee SB 583 authorizes localities to deploy a bus obstruction monitoring system to enforce ordinances for parking, stopping and standing in bus stops or lanes reserved for buses or specified vehicles. "When a vehicle is blocking a bus stop, it creates danger to disabled and senior riders," the patron said, emphasizing risks when wheelchair ramps deploy into the street.
Anne Shakhani of Hayden AI testified the company’s system is designed to minimize false tickets and supports human review of recorded footage. "Unless you've pulled directly in front of a bus or can see the bus directly behind you at a bus stop, then you are unlikely to be caught by the bus and receive a ticket," she said, adding that recordings not tied to an infraction are deleted within roughly 30 minutes and that recorded infractions are packaged for adjudication.
Representatives of transit agencies and advocacy groups urged committee support. Dave Alba, representing the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority, said parking in bus lanes has substantially reduced bus efficiency in other cities and cited improvements in on-time performance where similar programs exist. Joe Dillard of GRTC described a pilot with nearly 900 infractions in a short window and called the technology a reliability and safety tool. The Arc of Virginia and advocates for older and disabled riders also supported the bill, arguing blocked stops force riders into active traffic.
Committee members pressed witnesses on edge cases — temporary passenger drop-offs, ride-hailing pickups and the appeals process. Senator Morrison asked whether a driver who momentarily pulls into a bus lane to let a passenger out could be ticketed; Hayden AI said the system is configured to avoid penalizing brief drop-offs and that adjudicators can review evidence, while an operator is prohibited from receiving a share of fines. Senator Sturtevant raised concerns about TNC pickups near bus lanes; the patron said citations would be tied to obstructing and full stops, and appeals will be available.
After debate, the committee voted to report SB 583 (roll noted as recorded during the meeting). The bill now moves to the Finance Committee for further consideration.
