A new bill in New Jersey could keep its drivers from receiving tickets from other states. Sponsored by Senators Nicholas Sacco, Declan O’Scanlon, and Senate President Nicholas Scutari, it is receiving bipartisan support and unanimously passed the Senate Law and Public Safety Committee on Monday.

In order to become law, however, it will still have to pass the Assembly. If it succeeds, the bill would prohibit New Jersey state agencies from sharing a driver’s personal information for the purpose of issuing a ticket.

Named the “Camera Enforcement Inoculation Act,” O’Scanlon says that the bill would effectively prevent New Jersey drivers from getting tickets issued by speed and red-light cameras in other jurisdictions. It was modeled on a similar bill from North Dakota.

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Other states are “increasingly using these cameras to steal from New Jersey residents,” O’Scanlon said, according to the Burlington County Times. “Our residents go away and then they come home and a month or two months later they get a ticket in the mail.”

This is the state’s second attempt at introducing the law since 2014 when Senator Sacco and now Senate President Scutari introduced a similar bill.

Red-light cameras have been banned in New Jersey since the program expired in 2014 and speed cameras have never been allowed, so there is no reason why our residents should still be receiving citations from these devices,” said Scutari in a statement.

The bill’s sponsors claim that speed cameras and red-light cameras do little to improve road safety. However, the Centers for Disease Control, citing multiple scientific studies, reports that “speed cameras can reduce crashes substantially,” by as much as 25 percent according to some studies.

The Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, meanwhile, reports that an estimated 115,741 people were injured in red-light-running crashes and a further 928 were killed. A study it ran found that red-light cameras reduced the fatal red-light running crash rates of large cities by 21 percent and the rate of all types of fatal crashes at signalized intersections by 14 percent.

Accident rates are a particular concern right now as the U.S. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg recently unveiled plans to address record increases in traffic deaths on U.S. roads, including automated ticketing cameras.