There were also 129 city vehicles running at a red light.
The data, which was presented in a report to the Infrastructure and Environment Committee earlier this month, comes months after a CTV News Toronto survey found that hundreds of tickets were issued to city car operators within the first year of the automated speed enforcement program.
According to documents received in the context of requests for freedom of information, 326 tickets were issued in the first year.
At least 20 garbage trucks were involved, including a vehicle caught speeding outside a North York school as students were leaving for the day.
The documents also showed fines on more than two dozen special vehicles, including dump trucks, heavy-duty vehicles and vehicles carrying liquid bulk. At least two law enforcement vehicles were arrested for speeding.
The latest city report shows how many tickets were issued to employees between July 2020 and December 2021.
The biggest culprit is the Toronto Community Housing Corporation. The figures show that 90 tickets were issued to vehicles used by this department, representing about 20 percent of all offenses.
There were 75 vehicles in Parks, Forestry and Recreation and 69 solid waste management vehicles that were recorded moving at speed with automatic cameras.
As for the red lights, the vehicles with Transport Services received the largest number of violations with 29 tickets, followed closely by the vehicles in the Solid Waste Management and the Toronto Water.
“I believe that the city of Toronto should have a very high standard with zero vision, because it is our policy and we should set an example,” said Deputy Mayor Denzil Minan-Wong.
Tickets issued by automated speed tickets are issued to the vehicle owner and not to the driver, so the city ends up ahead of payments.
Speaking to CTV News Toronto in July 2021, the city said its drivers had been issued $ 85,037 worth of tickets over the past two years.
Officials could say for sure that he recovered $ 14,384.50 from that money, but at the time it was about $ 70,652.50. This is due in part to the challenges involved in understanding who is driving the vehicle at the time of the offense and to the difficulty of locating tickets during the pandemic.
The approximately 450 tickets issued in the last 18 months is a significant reduction compared to previous years, which according to city councilors proves that the automatic speed cameras work.
As a result, the city says it will introduce new vehicle tracking technology that will provide them with instant data on who is driving and how fast it is going.