
December 12, 2025 — 1:20pm
Save
You have reached your maximum number of saved items.
Remove items from your saved list to add more.
Save this article for later
Add articles to your saved list and come back to them anytime.
Got it
The WA government dished out $13 million in fines in just one month thanks to its new AI-powered traffic cameras.
The cameras have been operating since the start of the year, but authorities only began fining people from October 8.
New AI safety camera pictures have caught WA drivers up to some strange things while driving.
The cameras are mobile and can photograph drivers from a higher angle, giving a much better view of what drivers are doing behind the wheel.
Some of the worst behaviour captured between October 8 and November 8 included a truck driver driving along Mitchell Freeway with no hands on the wheel, using his laptop and mobile phone while not wearing a seatbelt.
Another driver was caught wearing no seatbelt while cradling an unrestrained baby, while another was caught driving 20 kilometres over the speed limit in a school zone while using a mobile phone with no hands on the wheel.
More than 31,800 infringements were issued in the first month of the cameras’ operation, including 12,288 for mobile phone use, 10,285 seatbelt offences and 9282 speeding offences.
More than 31,800 infringements were issued in the first month of the cameras’ operation.
“This is madness behind the wheel. Some of these photos are quite shocking when you see them, and we don’t want drivers doing these things,” Police Minister Reece Whitby said.
“As for seat belts, that’s a big shock for me to have so many people offending in terms of not wearing a seat belt or not wearing it properly, 50 years after these laws were introduced for front-seat passengers in Australia is beyond mind-boggling,” he said.
“It’s also mind-boggling to see people you know eating bowls of cereal or working on an iPad or having a toddler on their lap unprotected.”
Whitby said the cameras were not introduced to raise revenue.
“My answer to people who say this is revenue collecting is this: this is entirely voluntary. If you don’t want to pay the fine, don’t do the crime,” he said.
The cameras have alos taken photos of people eating at the wheel.
The $13 million in fines will go to the Road Trauma Trust Account, which is used for road upgrades across the state.
When asked about the grey areas of laws when it comes to consuming food or drink behind the wheel, Whitby said it came down to common sense.
“I think inherently we know when we don’t have proper control of the car, when we don’t have our hands on the wheel,” he said.
“Clearly, balancing a cereal bowl and feeding yourself with a spoon with no hands on the wheel, common sense tells you that’s not appropriate.”
Despite the cameras’ operation this year, WA has recorded a shocking number of deaths on the roads, with the tally already sitting at 176 ahead of the Christmas period.
That places this year at equal-second worst in a decade with 2024, behind 184 deaths in 2016.
Whitby said the education campaign earlier this year had worked, with the monthly rate of offences dropping from 47,500 in the first month of the cameras’ operation to 31,000 between October and November.
“31,000 a month is still too high. $13 million in revenue, which we will put to good use, it will all go back on to road safety. But we’d rather not have that money. We’d rather you doing the right thing behind the wheel,” he said.
Minister Assisting the Minister for Transport Jessica Stojkovski said the cameras were detecting offences that previously went undetected.
“The message is: the technology is now out there, unsafe behaviours will get you fined and you’ll incur demerit points,” she said.
Save
You have reached your maximum number of saved items.
Remove items from your saved list to add more.
Hamish Hastie is WAtoday’s state political reporter and the winner of five WA Media Awards, including the 2023 Beck Prize for best political journalism.Connect via Twitter or email.Most Viewed in NationalFrom our partners