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CRUSADE AGAINST ROAD CAMERAS PICKS UP SPEED
SUE RESTAN
08:50 - 10 January 2007
Support is growing for a Highland motorist's crusade against speed cameras.
Membership of the Safe Speed road safety campaign has gone up by almost 50% in the last year and an increasing number of worried drivers are calling Paul Smith, of Fearn, near Tain, in Easter Ross, each week to express their concerns about the cameras.
He said: "There's very, very substantial growth going on. We're growing at about 40% to 50% per annum and now have about 400 members.
"I get an average of about 10 calls from members of the public every day, many of whom have received a speed camera ticket and want to know their rights.
"Some are saying 'Someone has just got to do something about this because I know it just isn't right'. Drivers know by instinct that it's the wrong safety policy.
"The rest are ringing to congratulate us, saying they're pleased somebody is fighting speed cameras and asking what they can do. Every time the phone rings, it's positive. I don't get anybody ringing up to complain."
Mr Smith, 51, an advanced motorist, road safety enthusiast and a professional engineer of 25 years' UK experience, said most of the crashes on the roads were directly or indirectly related to driver quality, rather than to speed. "They're either caused by rogue drivers - people who are uninsured, unlicensed or in stolen vehicles - or by ordinary, responsible motorists, who make a simple mistake.
"We need to police the roads properly for rogue drivers and provide information and education for everyone else," he said.
And he said the number of motorists fighting speed camera tickets and winning was increasing.
"In 1997, 9% of the cases that went to court were found not guilty but by 2004 the figure had risen to 20%.
"I think motorists are getting legally smarter and angrier - they're much more up for a fight. It could also be that the administration is getting sloppier," he said.
Mr Smith said he started studying the effects of cameras on road safety as a hobby in 2001 and initially funded his activities from earnings as a computer engineer.
But the campaign grew and, in 2003, he gave up his job to concentrate on his mission against the indiscriminate use of speed cameras.
He has now devoted more that 20,000 hours to the campaign, for which he travels over 20,000 miles a year, and has personally funded it to the tune of £10,000.
"We believe that this is more work in more detail than anything carried out by any other organisation," said Mr Smith.
He claims to have discovered that speed cameras make our roads more dangerous.
And he says he has identified and reported a number of major flaws and false assumptions in the claims made for speed cameras, and the "speed kills" system of road safety.
"The inescapable conclusion is that we should urgently return to the excellent road safety policies that gave us in the UK the safest roads in the world in the first place. Far from saving lives, speed cameras are a dangerous distraction," said Mr Smith.