When a driver blasts through an intersection against a red light, causing you to hit the brakes and mutter “you’re going to kill someone,” you can take some solace that almost 1,200 drivers were caught in Maple Ridge and Pitt Meadows by red light cameras last year.
What’s more, an intersection camera in Maple Ridge catches more speeders than most in the province.
There are five Lougheed Highway junctions with intersection safety cameras in Maple Ridge and Pitt Meadows. All five have red light cameras, and two also have speed cameras.
The busiest is at 207th Street, which caught 3,012 speeders and 201 red light runners in 2025. There were only three B.C. cameras that caught more lead-foot drivers – two in Vancouver and one in Delta, with the busiest catching 4,600.
There are two intersections with cameras in Pitt Meadows, and the one at Old Dewdney Trunk Road and Lougheed caught 884 speeders and 181 red light runners.
The intersection at Harris Road and Lougheed has a red light camera that caught 128, while Maple Ridge’s red light cameras at 203rd Street (329 tickets) and Maple Meadows Way (326 tickets) were more busy.
There are highway signs that warn motorists when an intersection has speed or red light camera enforcement.
The highest location for crashes is the intersection of Lougheed and Harris, which averages 106 per year, with 49 causing injuries, based on data from 2017 to 2021.
By comparison, the worst intersections – such as Langley’s 264th and 56th Avenue – are seeing more than 400 crashes per year.
In 2025, the province issued 86,000 tickets from red light cameras, and 42,000 from speeding cameras, generating $22.2 million in revenue from fines. The revenue is given to municipalities for safety and policing costs.
There are 140 intersections in the province with safety cameras that are always operating. All of those have red light cameras, and 35 also have speed cameras.
All statistics provided by the B.C. government and ICBC.