ISP to begin using Electronic Ticketing system on July 1, 2010

Thursday, June 24, 2010

On July 1st the Idaho State Police will begin using an electronic system to issue traffic citations. The system was purchased with a $900,000 Federal Recovery Act grant awarded to ISP last fall. The system, dubbed "E-Ticketing" will allow for quicker, more accurate citations which will be transmitted electronically to the courts' and ISP's computer data bases. Captain Eric Dayley, the statewide project manager for ISP's E-Ticketing program says, "E-Ticketing will bring vast improvements to a process that hasn't had any major changes in the past 50 years."

The E-Ticketing process works like this, if a trooper decides to issue a citation to a driver, the driver's license information and the vehicle's registration information will be scanned into the E-Ticketing software using handheld barcode scanners. The trooper will then be able to select from dropdown lists, violation codes and location identifiers. The citation will then be printed out on a 4 inch printer similar to printers used in department stores.

Dayley points out that, "The entire process of completing citations will go from a 5 minute process to one that takes less than a minute. This will result in reduced time on the side of the highway for our troopers and the public, which is safer for both".

Another benefit of this system is the accuracy of the data collected. "The court clerks will no longer have to decipher officers' handwriting or citations where the copy did not come through clearly" Dayley continued. The accuracy of citation data is estimated to increase by at least 10%.

Another change in the ticket issuing process that will start with E-Ticketing is that people who receive E-Tickets will no longer have to sign the ticket. The trooper will just print it out, hand it to the person and then they can be on their way. The entire citation serving process will be streamlined and more efficient.

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  • Actually on the ticket it says

    "I understand the above notice and that my signature is not an admission of guilt"

    Whether you actually sign the ticket or not is a moot point, you still received the ticket. If you don't agree with it then fight it in court, that is your right.

    -- Posted by Weebro on Thu, Jun 24, 2010, at 5:47 PM
  • *

    Correct Weebro!

    Your signature on the ticket is not addmission of guilt, just stating that you will take care of the ticket. i.e paying it, or going to court and contesting it.

    Heck even I knew that just by watching COPS before my dad was a cop.

    -- Posted by BassmasterJ8 on Thu, Jun 24, 2010, at 11:05 PM
  • Just another waste of taxpayer's money.....increase in efficiency should lead to the elimination of at least two officers across the state though....(that's just wonderful though isn't it)...

    -- Posted by superman8570 on Thu, Jun 24, 2010, at 11:42 PM
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    $900,000 initial cost. How many individual pieces of equipment have to be maintainted at what daily cost? What is the mean time between failure for the equipment? Is their replacement cost projected in future budgets? What is the maintenance tail for the software that supports the system? There will also be training involved. No electronic system comes at the base cost. The cost to own and operate far exceeds the cost to purchase.

    -- Posted by VicVega on Fri, Jun 25, 2010, at 7:21 AM
  • Talk about making a mountain out of a molehill

    paranoia, will destroy ya...

    -- Posted by MrMister on Fri, Jun 25, 2010, at 8:17 PM
  • didn't we cut the education budget?

    -- Posted by blink208 on Fri, Jun 25, 2010, at 11:24 PM
  • *

    This system is being put in to Increase officer efficency and safety. The less time on a traffic stop, the more time they are physically patrolling the highways and not on the side of the road. Many states are going to this system, not just Idaho.

    Yes, I will defend law enforcement when defense is needed.

    Blink208 the article states this is being funded by a grant, not by the states funds.

    Vic check with ISP and see how much they pay for a ticket book and compare that to a roll of ticket paper and toner (ink). I'm not saying that it will be cheaper, as I have no idea, but if you want to know look into it. Don't hide behind your computer waiting for them to come to you. Also, our ISP guys are ticket happy, the standard Idaho written citation only has room for two violations, therefore requiring more than one ticket. Meaning double the information.

    Superman, article didn't say anything about firing/laying off 2 officers. Quit trying to make it something it's not.

    -- Posted by BassmasterJ8 on Sun, Jun 27, 2010, at 2:37 AM
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    Oh bazooka, don't think I left you out. The computer will obviously not be nabbing any bad guys, but will release officers sooner from their t-stops to respond to traffic complaints and other calls. Well actually, I suppose it might actually nab a few bad guys. According to some friends who are cops in Washington, when the officer scans your Drivers License, it will bring up your driving record, status, warrants, and etc In a simpler screen,which may have been missed by dispatchers. Because obviously nobody is perfect, mistakes do happen.

    -- Posted by BassmasterJ8 on Sun, Jun 27, 2010, at 2:45 AM
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    According to ISP current citations cost $0.21 per copy x 5 carbon copies. New tickets will cost $0.06 per copy x 2 copies

    -- Posted by BassmasterJ8 on Tue, Jun 29, 2010, at 10:21 PM
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