"We deploy the trailer for two weeks, collect the data, and sometimes if they want it, we'll give a summary to the citizen who called," says Officer Matt Klein of the Shawnee (Kan.) Police Department. "Oftentimes the data we collect shows there really is not a speed problem, but it does make the neighborhood feel better. It's actually a great way to conduct community policing."
Slowing Down Speeders
Klein notes that there is a difference between determining speeds and displaying speeds as vehicles drive by. You first want a true picture of how quickly people are driving in an area without the effect of a speed display sign. It's best to use covert monitoring devices to track dates, times, and speeds in a particular area at this point. This is because just seeing these signs tends to cause people to slow down.
Once it's determined people are driving too quickly in an area, slowing is of course the desired effect. In fact, the key is to convince drivers that they should slow down on their own, even if it requires a bit of trickery.
"The more the public sees us in a problem area, and at various times, the more likely they are to perceive the police as being 'always here or all over,' when in reality we are not," says Shawnee PD's Klein.