Leon Valley could be the last in Texas with red-light cameras
Published: Tue, 03/07/23
Leon Valley could be the last in Texas with red-light cameras

Bandera Road in Leon Valley. Two bills filed this session would make the city's contract with its photo-enforcement company void.
Zeke MacCormack
San Antonio Express-News
Tim Fanning - San Antonio Express-News
March 06, 2023 at 01:09PM
“It’s not the brand that Leon Valley wants to put out there, and we need help from Austin to purge this stain from our city,” said Jed Hefner, a city councilman from Leon Valley.
Rep. Philip Cortez and Sen. José Menéndez, both Democrats from San Antonio, have filed identical bills in the Texas House and Senate that hope to resolve years of frustration in Leon Valley over a previous administration’s decision to extend the use of red-light cameras after lawmakers outlawed them in 2019.
Sensing that their cameras were under fire, Leon Valley and Balcones Heights extended their contracts with Arizona firm American Traffic Solutions in 2019. Balcones Heights initially extended its contract until 2034, but due to a clerical error, the extension never made it through, and the program will expire next year. Leon Valley’s red-light camera program will expire in 2039.
Leon Valley’s contract with American Traffic Solutions was written in such a way that there was no way to exit the contract without prior termination. Such a move would cost the city millions.
Amarillo’s red-light camera contract expired last year, and Humble’s contract will expire in 2024.
In response to opponents, lawmakers over the years have stripped virtually all the penalties for not paying the $75 red-light-camera violations. Failure to pay cannot be reported to a credit agency, it has no effect on renewing a vehicle or driver’s license, and it cannot land the person in civil court.
But motorists who run lights in places like Leon Valley and Balcones Heights still get a ticket in the mail, and that’s causing confusion, Cortez said.
“Now we have residents only in Bexar County where there’s this confusion among residents who get something in the mail demanding them to pay this violation that is no longer allowed under state law,” Cortez said.
The cameras were initially pitched in Leon Valley as a boon for public safety that would reduce crashes and improve traffic flow, specifically on Bandera Road, one of the worst corridors in Bexar County.
Leon Valley council members who were instrumental in the extension of its contract have since been voted out or recalled. Also gone are the city manager and police chief who backed using the cameras.
Now the cameras are unpopular among residents, Hefner said.
“Our citizens don’t want them,” Hefner said. “Getting rid of them is the right thing to do for our city.”
But red-light cameras have been lucrative for Leon Valley. Public records show that the city’s 14 cameras posted at 10 intersections around the city have generated almost $7 million since they were put in place in 2018.
The cameras are expected to bring in $1.8 million this year, according to Leon Valley’s latest budget. These cameras have generated $632,237 in late fees since Fiscal Year 2017-18, records show.
A previous iteration of Cortez’s bill died last session. Cortez said that he is “cautiously optimistic” this time around.
“The political will is there,” Cortez said. “When you have support of the local elected leadership and that of businesses saying, ‘Please help us,’ that’s a pretty strong indicator that this bill should pass.”
Leon Valley elected officials say they’re more organized and energized this time around.
Last month, Leon Valley City Council unanimously passed a resolution stating their intent to phase out or remove red-light cameras if Cortez’s bill passes. Leon Valley officials are also drafting a letter to state lawmakers in support of the bills.
“The biggest hurdle we have to overcome is that we’re one small city in the great state of Texas,” Hefner said. “Our city really is the only one in the entire state that is in this situation. And so does that rise to the level of getting our senators and representatives in Austin to take action? I hope it is.”
timothy.fanning@express-news.net