Skip to content
Join our Newsletter

Leadfoots beware: VPD ramping up efforts to catch speeders in Vancouver

The VPD Traffic Unit caught a commercial vehicle going 91 km/hr in a 50 km/hr zone on May 11. 
vpd-catch-speeder-feature
VPD Traffic Section catches an excessive speeder in Vancouver. Photo: @VPDTrafficUnit / Twitter

The VPD Traffic Enforcement is warning leadfoots that they are doubling down on efforts this week to target excessive speeders and other forms of dangerous behaviour. 

As part of Canada Road Safety Week, which runs from May 12 to May 18, police say that it is, "Let's think differently about problematic driving behaviour and change bad habits." 

Vancouver police remind road users that, "impaired, distracted, and aggressive driving behaviours are preventable and not worth the risk."

"It’s time to start shifting gears."


As people start to return to the roads, police say that they are dedicated to increasing road safety with targeted enforcement of unsafe behaviour. They also note that less traffic on the roads due to COVID-19 is not an excuse for speeding, racing or stunt driving. 

VPD Staff Sergeant Dave Duncan shared an image of a radar gun that shows a clocked speed of 91 km/h. He remarks that the VPD Traffic Unit caught a commercial vehicle going 91 km/hr in a 50 km/hr zone on May 11. 

The Motor Vehicle Act defines excessive speeding as going over 40 km/hr above the speed limit. Doing so comes with a hefty $483 fine in addition to a seven-day vehicle impound. 

Mark Christensen, Traffic Sergeant for the Vancouver Police Department, has shared a few photos of speeders VPD Traffic Unit caught to his Twitter account this month. 

On Thursday, May 7, Christensen posted a photo of three vehicles being towed for excessive speeding. He reports that three tow trucks were used to take away the vehicles that were excessively speeding in a residential area. One was clocked speeding at 98 km/hr, a second at 100 km/hr, and a third at 107 km/hr. 

Christensen previously shared an image to his Twitter account of a Porsche being towed on the Granville Street Bridge. The driver was doing 93 km/hr in a 30 km/hr zone, which would also be considered excessive speeding.

Leadfoots beware: 35 intersections in B.C. are now equipped with automatic speed ticketing cameras, 24/7. 

In May 2019, the Government of British Columbia announced that it was cracking down on dangerous driving with a new automatic ticketing system in the summer. However, the system was slowly rolled out over time, with the first five activated in July 2019.

Since B.C. activated its first five automated speed enforcement cameras at the end of July 2019, the government notes that the program has issued more than 20,000 speeding tickets. According to a release, "The fastest ticketed vehicle clocked 174 km/h at a location where the posted speed limit is 80 km/h."

Now, Mike Farnworth, Minister of Public Safety and Solicitor General, has confirmed that automated speed enforcement equipment is now in place at all 35 planned Intersection Safety Camera (ISC) program sites and operating at 34 of them, on a 24/7 basis. Have a look at an interactive map of where they are located.