I dont see anything unsafe about the
conviction, because the offence is vague and open to interpretation - with good reason.
It's not a new offence - it is years old, and covers a whole range of bad practice by road users.
The clue is in the detail :
Quote:
A few minutes after the block had been put in place officers saw Wilson heading down the inside lane at speed before passing their high visibility patrol vehicle at the front of the block, the court was told.
If this was backed up with witnesses, or CCTV, then it's a fair cop.
I think the sentence is a bit severe, but even that might be apt if the driver failed to convince the court that they had learned a lesson.
Quote:
She appeared for trial at Bolton Magistrates' Court charged with driving without reasonable consideration for other road users.
<<snip>>
She denied breaching a rolling road block set up by Highways Agency Traffic Officers from the North West Traffic Officer Service outstation.
<<snip>>
A rolling road block normally involves one or two Highways Agency vehicles travelling at a reduced speed and slowing traffic flow on the motorway to enable work to be carried out ahead.
Now that they have seen fit to resurrect this law of driving without reasonable consideration for other road users, then it is about time it was used as it once was to prosecute drivers who tailgate, hog the middle lane, or splash pedestrians as they pass puddles!
I believe the qualifier used to be if you occupied the middle/outer lane for 1/2 mile or 30 seconds without passing a vehicle, then the law could be brought to bear.