Posted By Nick House
I am not advocating the use of excessive speed (although the argument could be more adequately phrased as inappropriate speed - but that is a completely different discussion and has no place here), but a simple comparison with accident figures in France could well be used to discredit the current trend to concentrate on using speed cameras rather than using a higher police presence. I have driven/ ridden in France on several occasions, and although there are still idiots on the road there, overall the attitude is completely different.
The % of accidents as a proportion of vehicles equates to 0.8% in the UK and 0.3% in France. There are 29,638,976 vehicles in the UK, and 34,291,275 vehicles in France, and yet the International Road Traffic and Accident Database 2000 statistics reported 242,118 accidents in the UK, compared to 121,220 in France.
Is it a coincidence that there are no speed cameras in France, and the traffic police presence is considerably higher than in the UK - the survey does not go into this detail, but surely it cannot be dismissed as coincidence.
I know that those of us in the South regularly moan about foreign (read French) drivers on our roads, but are we really that different when the roles are reversed?
In addition to this, until there are regular compulsory refresher courses for drivers/ riders in the UK, then accident statistics are unlikely to see any marked improvement - after all, where else can you pass an initial test, and then happily continue with no further training to improve your skills for an indefinite period of time?
Driving instructors readily state that they do not really 'teach people to drive', merely 'teach them to pass their test'. Just because someone has passed their driving test, does not necesarily mean that they are a competent driver, merely that they have reached the required standards to pass the driving test.
therefore in my opinion (and I stress that it is only an opinion), to see a marked reduction in road traffic accidents is to provide compulsory ongoing training, have a higher police presence, and hand out stiffer penalties for dangerous drivers.
Although I am all infavour of ahving speed cameras in accident black spots, and in places such as outside schools, I can't see the justification for erecting ever more cameras on open stretches of roads.
Apologies for going on a little in this post, but I do have strong feelings on this one (as, I can imagine a lot of others do (on both sides of the fence)).
Regards
Nick.