I get a sense from many of these posts it's all about revenue generation. I feel like I am taxed to death already and if you take that and multiply times millions of taxpayers that's a lot of money! And yet governments need to raise more revenue through fines. So, where does it all go?
I picked this post to respond to, although I could have picked any of the posts regarding revenue and traffic tickets.
In Missouri, following the Ferguson debacle, city court revenue underwent a massive review. For those unfamiliar with the St. Louis area, the city of St. Louis is its own county. The history of the St. Louis City Police Department, which until recently had historically been run by a board of commissioners appointed by the Governor, is complicated, and fraught with many topics that we don't discuss here on this forum.
St. Louis County consists of 94 (I think, some have consolidated recently) separate municipalities, some no bigger than a couple square miles. Most have their own small police department and municipal court. Most touch boundaries, so that only isolated small patches of unincorporated St. Louis County are spaced about the area.
Now, to my point, many, if not most, of these municipalities were funding city government at about 50% to 75% with ticket revenue, including property violations and the big one, "Failure to Appear."
After Ferguson, the courts and the legislature combined to limit revenue from city courts to 12.5% of the budget within St. Louis County, and 20% outside the county. Many municipalities have since ditched or combined their municipal courts, and ditched their police departments as well. The St. Louis County Police Department has expanded to provide these services to cities via contracts, and there's another "cooperative" that has formed to provide police services to multiple municipalities in North County.
The ultimate goal is to combine St. Louis County and St. Louis City into a single political subdivision/entity, and there's a move to place the issue on a statewide ballot this fall.
That's a long way to go to say "Yeah, y'all are essentially right about this, at least in St. Louis County . . . "