Finland issues speeding ticket on a “day-fine” system. It is calculated as “daily disposable income”, which is multiplied by “days units” (the faster someone was speeding = more days). Two years ago, a driver got a $174K speeding ticket fine based on the formula.
Trung Phan
Trung Phan4.8. klo 00.28
Helsinki recorded 0 traffic deaths in the past year. Safe driving credited to: ▫️Speed Limits: 1/2 of city streets have speed limit of 30km/hr or less (50 years ago, same % was 50km/hr) ▫️Fines: Speeding tickets calculated as % of income ▫️Street designs: Infrastructure for bikes and pedestrians improved including clearly-marked lanes and raised crosswalks (video below is example of one such “street table” in Connecticut) ▫️Traffic monitoring: Upgraded tools at major intersections (eg. cameras, automated flagging) and a lot of traffic officers enforcing rules *** Details on past 12 months: Everyday Engineering video:
Drivers 3rd fine of $60k+:
67,54K