This is a printer friendly version of an article from
www.goupstate.com
To print this article open the file menu and choose
Print.
Back
Article published Jul 29, 2003
State may begin charging for traffic
control
PAMELA HAMILTON
Associated
Press
COLUMBIA -- The state Department of Public Safety said
Monday it could get an income boost by charging universities and groups that use
the state highway patrol to direct traffic during special events as much as $24
per hour per trooper.
During budget vetoes last month, Gov. Mark Sanford gave
DPS the authority to charge for traffic control that troopers provide at events
such as college football games and parades.
Troopers currently work such
events at no charge. A change in policy could come as early as this fall, when
dozens of troopers direct traffic during college football games.
Sanford
talked about the potential change during a budget hearing Monday with Public
Safety officials. The governor is gathering input from state agencies for his
executive budget.
DPS is slated to receive $70.8 million in state funding
during fiscal year 2004, a decline of nearly 27 percent from 2001. The Highway
Patrol, a division of DPS, employs 152 fewer state troopers now than three years
ago; the agency as a whole has 376 fewer workers.
Allowing DPS to charge for
special events would mean more troopers on the highways for ordinary duties and
would give the agency some extra money during tight budget times, said agency
director Boykin Rose.
"The cost of providing these services is significant,"
Rose said. "In the past, we have been unable to recoup that."
Such traffic
control costs the patrol about $1 million a year in manpower, DPS officials have
said.
The agency is working out how much money it would charge for special
events and which groups would be charged and would get the final OK from
Sanford, Rose said.
Money wasn't the only topic at the budget hearing.
Sanford asked Rose whether the Highway Patrol had a quota system.
A former
state trooper has sued the patrol, claiming troopers who wrote a certain number
of tickets were rewarded.
"The patrol has no quotas," Rose said. "What we
emphasize is quality over quantity."
A trooper who writes few tickets but
invests time in other activities, such as giving warnings and investigating
accidents or drunken and reckless driving incidents, is not going to be
reprimanded, Rose said.
One who writes no tickets or gives no warnings in a
single day is "a lazy ... nonproductive" trooper, he said.
South Carolina
troopers wrote 517,579 tickets in 2002, according to DPS figures.