The era of running after traffic offenders is gone with the introduction of the PayVIS, a number plate detection platform by the Lagos State Government (LASG).
Over the years, motorists in the state were said to have caused more damage in an attempt to evade arrest or payment of fines for traffic offences.
But officials of the state Vehicle Inspection Service (VIS) do not have to run after traffic offenders again with the deployment of technology by the state.
PlateDetect also known as Automatic Number Plate Recognition (ANPR) device, is a traffic analytics and access control application developed for Lagos State’s Vehicle Inspection Service to track, monitor, and book traffic offenders.
The app, according to the information extracted on the VIS website, “ensures that all vehicle documentation (vehicle license, insurance policy, road worthiness certificate, driver’s license, hackney permit (commercial vehicles only), Lagos State Drivers’ Institute Card (commercial vehicles) can be verified and tickets raised for violators.”
How does it work?
Traffic cameras located beside traffic lights will capture traffic offenders without the presence of traffic officials.
The camera takes a photo of the vehicle’s plate number and runs a scan of the vehicle’s records in the state’s VIS database.
To detect whether you may have had a prior traffic offense, vehicle owners are urged to visit their website, type in their number plate and then click on search. Once this is done, a bill is generated for any outstanding offense.