Mr Chirpy wrote:
If you read your own quote you will notice that speeding has been metioned as 'one' of the main causes, not 'the' cause.
Yes but thats still bollocks isn't it
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Some good points though:-
I disagree with a blanked 20mph default speed limit for most urban roads etc. However I would like to see a 20mph limit outside schools, doctors surgeries and residential homes. Small avenues or closes could do with something like this, especially places where children frequently play around the street.
The other day I was passing through one of Oxfordshires 20 MPH limits. Pedestrians in these areas no longer even look before stepping off the kerb as they do not view the traffic as a hazard, a very dangerous place IMHO. FWIW there is one area (pinch point) in there where even if the speed limit was 30 (as it should be) I would be crawling at 10 as that was the safe speed
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Insurance changes would be good in instances of proven driver guilt. I am a cyclist and get a general opinion that it is always harder for the 'softer' party, i.e cyclist, pedestrian or horse rider to claim any substantial damages when struck by a vehicle. If the softer party was in question though and it was their fault they should receive nothing.
And should cyclists/pedestraians and horse riders be forced to have suitable insurance cover as in the event that an accident is down to the soft party then the motorist still suffers as his own insurance is used to cover the loss, there by costing on the no claims.
It should be noted that the major reason why Causing death by dangerous driving is not the charge after a fatal is that the driver who survived was no the cause and it was down to the pedestrian. Before you go off on one I comment as one whose child sibling was killed in an RTA and it was her fault (al be it that she was only 18 months old at the time, by the way there was a 15 mph speedd limit (it was on an RAF base MSQ) and the driver was going under that at the time.
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Lowering a drink drive limit is good, I think there should be no drinking allowed before you drive. Obviously you have to set a certain limit that isn't going to result in lots of people getting cuaght for a rediculously low level of alcohol in the blood, e.g after eating a liquor chocolate or something silly like that.
The drink driving limit is not the problem, police are reporting that in a vast percentage of accidents a driver is over the existing limit, the problem is that people do not have any expectation that they will be caught anymore as there are so few police on the streets.
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Even if you drive with a hands free unit the phone call can still majorly distract you so I would like to see something done about this too. We all know on here how bad distractions for drivers are!!!
More distractiong are the screaming children ( I know I have two of them), ban people from having children in the car, I personally am very unconvinced of the real danger of using Mobile Phones in cars, I think it is popularist legislation supporting a myth created by spin and technophobes
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Banning speed detector equipment is both good and bad. If your detector genuinely warns you of an upcoming blackspot then a warning is good, however if you are just 'listening' out for speed cameras then that should be banned. Not sure about extending the ban to satnav and gps systems as they are very useful, as long as they are not too distracting.
But of course if the Government and Road Saftey campaigners had a genuine interest in saving lives these things would not require banning as they would not be required period.
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Black boxes, well anything that records a vehicles speed etc at the time of a crash is useful.
No what is useful is efforts that prevent the crash in the first place.
Can't really go into detail about driving offence details as I am not a law person but anything to tighten this up would be useful.
Reducing danger encompasses many many things. The council could be seen to reduce danger in certain ways but how would this be implemented???