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Boca Raton’s School Zone Speed Cameras Issued 328 Violations in 10 Days; Approval Sought for More Cams

In the first 10 days after Boca Raton began issuing violations to motorists who got caught by speed cameras in several school zones, 328 tickets were generated by the system. Meanwhile, the city is continuing its rollout of the program and waiting on county approval to deploy the cameras in school zones that are located on county roads.

City Manager Mark Sohaney announced the numbers in the initial tranche of tickets mailed to drivers. The tickets carry only a civil fine – not a traffic violation that produces points on one’s driver’s license or increased insurance rates. As the system continues to be rolled out, the city council last week passed a resolution authorizing additional staff to handle appeals of the violations once issued. In the case of Boca Raton, the city chose to designate its existing special magistrates to serve as local hearing officers to conduct hearings for individuals contesting violations. They also designated existing staff members to serve as the clerks to the local hearing officer.

The cameras have been deployed at three schools since the start of the 2025-26 school year, and began issuing tickets Oct. 16. Drivers will be fined $100 when they drive 10 miles per hour over the school speed limit while the lights on adjacent school zone signs are flashing. The city will add four additional sets of cameras to other schools in town in the future, but must wait for permission to do so.

School speed cameras and zone signs near the J.C. Mitchell Elementary School. (Photo: Boca Daily News)

School speed cameras and zone signs near the J.C. Mitchell Elementary School. (Photo: Boca Daily News)




“Those are county roads, so we’re waiting on county permits to be issued before [the cameras] can be installed,” said Sohaney. “Once those permits are received, it will only take a couple weeks to get them installed.”

For each $100 fine collected by RedSpeed, the camera vendor, the company will receive $21. The city will receive a payment of $39 to be used for “city public safety initiatives,” as permissible under the law. The remaining $40 from each fine will be distributed to various funds mandated by law, with $5 going to the city for the School Crossing Guard Recruitment and Retention Program, $12 to the Palm Beach County School District, $20 to the Florida General Fund, and $3 to the Florida Department of Law Enforcement Training.

The locations of the cameras – both present and future – can be found in the chart below.

SchoolAddressTimesImplementation
Addison Mizner Elementary School 199 SW 12th Ave8:00am - 2:05pmSTART OF 2025-26
Boca Raton Community High School 1501 NW 15th Ave8:30am - 3:20pm START OF 2025-26
J.C. Mitchell Elementary School2470 NW 5th Ave 8:00am - 2:05pmSTART OF 2025-26
Blue Lake Elementary School799 Banyan Trail8:00am - 2:05pmMid-Year 2025-26
Calusa Elementary School2051 Clint Moore Rd8:00am - 2:05pmMid-Year 2025-26
Omni Middle School5775 Jog Rd9:30am - 4:05pmMid-Year 2025-26
Spanish River Community High School5100 Jog Rd8:30am - 3:20pmMid-Year 2025-26