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A traffic camera is a video camera which observes vehicular traffic on a road. Typically, traffic cameras are put along major roads such as highways, freeways, expressways and arterial roads, and are connected by optical fibers buried alongside or under the road, with electricity provided either by mains power in urban areas, by solar panels or other alternative power sources which provide ...
Lahaina, a town of 12,000 on the island of Maui, was decimated by a wildfire 8 August, prompting mass evacuations and power outages. Watch live: Lahaina residents queue to re-enter town burned ...
GEORGE F. LEE / GLEE @STARADVERTISER.COM Outbound traffic was backed up on the Lahaina Bypass Road on the evening of July 31 on Maui. Community members are pushing for an extension of the bypass ...
A traffic enforcement camera (also a red light camera, speed camera, road safety camera, bus lane camera, depending on use) is a camera which may be mounted beside or over a road or installed in an enforcement vehicle to detect motoring offenses, including speeding, vehicles going through a red traffic light, vehicles going through a toll booth ...
Lahaina Roads, also called the Lahaina Roadstead, [1] is an anchorage in the ʻAuʻau Channel lying off the town of Lahaina on the island of Maui in the Hawaiian archipelago and U.S. state of Hawaii. It lies in the lee of the West Maui Mountains , with the surrounding islands of Lānaʻi (and to a lesser extent, Molokaʻi and Kahoʻolawe ...
When a deadly wildfire tore through Lahaina on Maui last August, the wall of flames scorched the 151-year-old banyan tree along the historic town's Front Street.
[6] [31] Netherlands-based Gatso presented red light cameras to the market in 1965, [19] and red light cameras were used for traffic enforcement in Israel as early as 1969. [3] In the early 1970s, red light cameras were used for traffic enforcement in at least one jurisdiction in Europe. [3] Australia began to use them on a wide scale in the 1980s.
The middle of the ʻAuʻau channel off Lahaina is known as the Lahaina Roads. Once filled with whalers when Lahaina was a capital for that industry, Lahaina Roads were later adopted as an alternate anchorage for the main U.S. Pacific Fleet based at Pearl Harbor. However, Lahaina was not used, and the bulk of the fleet remained moored in Pearl ...