Traffic & Transit

Safety Measures For Safer Roads Are Put In Place As Kids Head Back To School In Howard Co.

Police officers remind drivers of the fines for passing stopped school buses and speeding in school zones as school starts next week.

Traffic patrols will be in place on the roads surrounding elementary, middle and high schools for the first three weeks of the school year.
Traffic patrols will be in place on the roads surrounding elementary, middle and high schools for the first three weeks of the school year. (Shutterstock)

HOWARD COUNTY, MD — As students prepare to return to school next week, Howard County police are working to make sure that children, parents and teachers arrive safely. Through an ongoing back-to-school program known as H.A.S.T.E. (Helping Arriving Students Through Enforcement), officers will focus on enforcing speed limits, seat belt laws and child safety seat laws in school zones.

Traffic patrols will be in place on the roads surrounding elementary, middle and high schools for the first three weeks of the school year. Officers will be working to identify drivers who are speeding in those areas. They also will be checking for seat belt and child safety seat use to ensure all occupants are properly restrained.

Police also remind drivers that buses serving the Howard County Public School System have been outfitted with external cameras. The purpose of the program, which launched last school year, is to ensure student safety by discouraging motorists from passing buses illegally. The state of Maryland’s fine for illegally passing a school bus is $250.

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The police department also aims to protect walking students in school zones with a speed camera program designed to encourage drivers to slow down with fines set at $40. The cameras are rotated among various school zones in the county, which are posted in advance and updated every week at hcpd.org. The site also offers additional information on all the department’s automated enforcement programs and answers to frequently asked questions.

New lighted stop signs have been distributed to all crossing guards in an effort to improve visibility and the safety of students and guards, too. The signs were funded by fines collected through HCPD’s Automated Enforcement programs.

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