It’s the city that never slows down!

School-zone speed cameras have caught lead-footed drivers speeding more than 1 million times in just three months since the city expanded the program on July 11, according to exclusive data from the Department of Finance.

The biggest speed trap is a section of Seagirt Boulevard in the Rockaways, where the city issued a whopping 28,368 violations, according to a Post analysis of the city data.

During just 15 days in July, cameras snagged scofflaws 11,841 times — an average of 789 a day.

Edwin Williams, vice president of the Heart of Rockaway civic group, was stunned by the number.

“Jesus, that is astronomical,” Williams said. “Holy cow!”

Williams said people race on the peninsula’s boulevards, often using them as a short cut from the congested Belt Parkway.

“We call it the NASCAR speedway,” he said. “It’s bad.”

Jonathan Gaska, district manager of the local Community Board, said Seagirt Boulevard was “a wide-open stretch with just a handful of traffic lights.”

“People aren’t used to [the cameras],” he said. “It takes you about three weeks to get the summons. After that, you behave yourself.”

In fact, the number of violations dropped to 5,409 in September, records show.

From 2014 to 2017, the city issued 3.5 million violations from speed cameras in school zones.

Legislation signed by Gov. Andrew Cuomo in May allowed the city to expand the number of camera school zones from 140 to 750 and increase the hours the cameras can monitor.

The cameras operate from 6 a.m. to 10 p.m. on weekdays whether school is open or not. They don’t have to be placed in front of a school, either. They can be within a quarter-mile radius.

The Seagirt Boulevard zone is a few blocks west of a religious school with 2,200 students.

The city Department of Transportation said there is a history of speeding at the intersection of Seagirt Boulevard and Crest Road, and three people had been seriously injured there from 2013 to 2017.

Other top ticket locations include the intersection of Altantic Avenue at Clermont Avenue in Brooklyn — located near the School for Career Development — where 18,928 violations were issued.

Drivers were caught 17,525 times on Conduit Boulevard at Glenmore Avenue in Brooklyn. The speed trap is one block north of PS 159 on Pitkin Avenue.

The DOT is adding new school speed zones at a rate of 40 per month through the end of this year and will increase the rate to 60 a month next year, the agency said.

There are now 284 fixed zones and another 40 mobile ones.

Violations are issued in the zones when drivers go at least 11 mph over the 25 mph speed limit.

At $50 a pop, the 1,053,282 violations handed out through Oct. 11 could add $52.7 million to city coffers if the registered owner of every mail-ticketed vehicle pays up.

Some motorists believe the speed cameras are more about revenue-raising than student safety, especially when the cameras are clicking at night and in the summer, when classes are not in session.

“It’s taxation by citation, policing for profit,” said Sheila Dunn, a spokeswoman for the National Motorists Association, which opposes the cameras, saying they don’t make streets safer.

One Bronx driver who has been caught three times called the program “unfair” and said it has turned her from a careful driver into a fearful one.

“I find myself driving very slowly, looking at the speedometer a great deal. I don’t want to get any more tickets,” she said.

New York City school zones where the most camera-generated speeding violations have been issued from July 11 to Oct. 11, 2019.

Seagirt Boulevard at Crest Road, Queens: 28,368 Atlantic Avenue at Clermont Avenue, Brooklyn: 18,928 Eastbound Conduit Boulevard at Glenmore Avenue, Brooklyn: 17,525 Main Street and 82nd Drive, Queens: 16,910 East 233rd Street at Katonah Avenue, Bronx: 16,276 Horace Harding Expressway at Peck Avenue, Queens: 13,724 Howard Avenue at East New York Avenue, Brooklyn: 13,104 Hillside Avenue at 251st Street, Queens: 12,322 East Gun Hill Road at Tiemann Avenue, Bronx: 12,201 Springfield Boulevard at 133rd Street, Queens: 12, 124

Source: New York City Department of Finance