The device is set to spread nationwide, and has already sparked fury in the anti-camera lobby. Unlike traditional Gatsos, it has no film inside and is linked via a telephone line to a control centre. That means it's live all the time, and if it's set off will issue a ticket.
The device in our picture is on the A4 Bath Road in the Brislington district of Bristol, and is one of several that have just gone up in the town. Dave Gollicker, spokesman for road safety group Avon, Somerset and Gloucestershire Camera Partnership, said: "We have introduced these cameras because of the parking problems in Bristol. When our engineers change the film in the cameras, we get complaints - but with these devices, we don't have to park at all."
The Monitrons haven't gone live yet, and white calibration lines on the road have still to be painted. In all, there will be 20 cameras in the Bristol area. Eight will be sited to snap speeders, with another 12 at junctions to catch red light jumpers. That model is called the RedGuard, but another device, RedSpeed, can do both jobs at the same time. Goll- icker said: "Once everything is in place, we'll tell people about the cameras and their locations through the media."
Captain Gatso, a spokesman for militant anti-speed camera group Motorists Against Detection (MAD), which has destroyed Gatsos in the past, said: "We have only just been alerted to this new menace on the roads. It's no longer a lottery of wondering whether the camera flashing will lead to a ticket coming through the post - now it's a dead cert." Meanwhile, the boom in the number of UK speed cameras has sparked a new range of fashion wear from design label Nanny State. The Kill Joy T-shirts cost £35 and come in beige, black or cream. Call 01785 815023 to order.
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