Sunday, November 16, 2025

WA switches on safety camera campaign

A WA Road Safety Commission camera awareness campaign has gone live across TV, radio, print, digital, social media and roadside billboard channels to remind drivers that safety cameras will begin enforcing next month.

Following an eight-month education and caution notice period, enforcement will officially commence for offences detected by Western Australia’s new fixed and trailer mounted AI-enabled safety cameras on 8 October.

The message is clear: Touching your phone? Incorrectly or not wearing a seatbelt? Speeding? You’ll be caught in a flash.

The ‘Caught in a Flash’ campaign aims to further increase public knowledge of the safety cameras and shift driver behaviour before infringements start being issued. 

Six safety camera trailers operating in the Perth metropolitan area, Great Southern and Mid West, and fixed cameras on the Kwinana Freeway have detected more than 300,000 mobile phone, seatbelt and speeding offences since February.

Of those seatbelt and mobile phone offences in that period, more than 65,000 caution notices have been issued to warn and give drivers an opportunity to change their behaviour.

“Our safety cameras are a critical addition to existing enforcement tools, helping to tackle the dangerous driving behaviours most commonly linked to serious and fatal crashes,” said Road Safety Minister, Reece Whitby.

“This is about fairness and safety. For eight months we have warned drivers, and our ‘Caught in a Flash’ campaign is another attempt to prompt people to change their dangerous driving behaviours before enforcement commences.

“The community partnerships are an essential part of a fair and inclusive education approach to ensure everyone understands how new safety cameras work and why they are being introduced.

“Too many lives are lost or forever changed because someone chose to speed, look at their phone, or not wear a seatbelt properly.

“Drivers have had months of warning and plenty of time to adjust. Now it’s time to enforce the rules that keep our community safe.”

Over the course of the caution notice period, there has been a decrease in offences detected by the safety cameras, the WA Government said in a statement.

The Government has also committed more than $750,000 across five new community partnerships to help inform drivers about the new safety camera technology.

The partnerships, funded under the Road Safety Commission’s Community Initiatives Program, will deliver targeted education programs across the metropolitan and regional areas, including those in remote communities.

The safety camera program is funded through the Road Trauma Trust Account, which sees 100% of safety camera infringements allocated to projects and programs which reduce injuries and deaths on WA roads.

For more information about the safety camera program, visit www.rsc.wa.gov.au/safetycameras.

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