It starts with a flash capturing an image of your car on camera when it crosses the white line after the light is red.

Red light cameras are moving into Osceola County. Monday is the first day you might get a ticket if you run on red. 

We just found out how many of these cameras the county is thinking about putting on roadways, and the number may surprise you.

"There are a lot of people who are speed driving and they cut in front of you and stuff like that and cause accidents. And I kind of think that, and cause accidents. I kind of think it'll be good," said Erlyn Depena, a Poinciana resident.

Osceola Commissioners said the cameras are in place to prevent accidents and truly believe that's what will happen.

But not all drivers feel like these cameras are reasonable. Take Donald Hamilton who has to drive a trailer full of cattle through an intersection.

"If I've got a lot of calves to move and the light is yellow, I'm not going to stop in a hurry and cripple something I've got on the trailer," Hamilton said. "But I don't want to endanger anyone's life, neither."

And he's not the only one who's worried these cameras are catching the wrong culprits.

In Lake County, at least 2,373 tickets were dismissed after there was a dispute over the right on red rule in the city of Clermont.

Osceola Commissioners said right turn on red violations will not be enforced, but left turn and straight through violations will.

Although tickets begin Monday, we're told they'll just be warnings for drivers who run lights at the intersection of Pleasant Hill Road and Poinciana Boulevard, where two cameras have already been installed.

Those warnings will switch to $158 tickets, beginning July 16.

At least nine other intersections are expected to start having red light cameras up and running in August.