This just gone to 710 motoring connected journalists, editors and politicians:
PR127: Professors agree speed camera report is fraudulent
NEWS: For immediate release
Speaking on Radio 5 live on 15th June 2004, Paul Smith of the Safe
Speed road safety campaign, revealed that new government figures
claiming success for speed cameras included a serious statistical
error. Paul followed this up with a press release and an open letter
to the lead author of the offending report, Professor Heydecker.
Paul Smith, founder of the Safe Speed road safety campaign said:
"Speed cameras in the UK are an unmitigated disaster. Now we seem to
be suffering, not only from the cameras themselves, but also from
layers of deceit as those who have faith in the camera system try to
paper over the spreading cracks with scientifically invalid
"evidence"."
Following Safe Speed's revelations many senior academics have joined
the complaints. They include:
Professor emeritus Mervyn Stone (UCL)
Professor emeritus John Brignell (Southampton)
Professor John Adams (UCL)
Professor Garel Rhys (Cardiff)
Professor Michael Silver (Cardiff)
Now "Numberwatch", a web site edited by Professor John Brignell, says:
"In particular, one Benjamin Heydecker, who rejoices in the title of
Professor in the Centre for Transport Studies University College
London, persistently renews this deception, although its fraudulent
nature has been pointed out to him over and over again. That is the
way the professorate behaves in the post-scientific age."
In a written report for the Radio 4 Today programme, Professor Mervyn
Stone said: "The three-year DfT report was released from a
politically-dictated embargo on June 15th. As I implied in my speed
camera judgement, its analysis of the data from the 24 police force
areas makes no quantitative allowance for regression to the mean.
Section G3 of the report gives reasons for thinking that the
established statistical phenomenon of regression to the mean will not
apply in full measure". I interpret this to mean that the authors
acknowledge that the estimates of savings of casualties and accidents
in the Executive Summary should be taken as upper bound estimates.
Will the public be made sufficiently aware of this qualification? Was
the minister?"
<ends>
Notes for editors.
====================
Comments regarding the DfT report on the Numberwatch web site:
http://www.numberwatch.co.uk/2004_June.htm#speed
Professor John Brignell's CV:
http://www.ecs.soton.ac.uk/~jeb/cv.htm
Numberwatch home page:
http://www.numberwatch.co.uk
Previous Safe Speed PR:
http://www.safespeed.org.uk/pr126.html
Safe Speed letter to Professor Heydecker:
http://www.safespeed.org.uk/heydecker2.html
Regression to the mean primer:
http://www.safespeed.org.uk/rttm.html
DfT Report: "The national safety camera programme: Three-year
evaluation report":
http://www.dft.gov.uk/stellent/groups/d ... 029194.pdf
DfT Road Safety Good Practice Guide:
http://www.dft.gov.uk/stellent/groups/d ... 64-06.hcsp
Professor John Adams (UCL) quoted in The Times, 25th June 2004
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/printFrien ... 90,00.html
Professors Garel Rhys (Cardiff) and Michael Silver (Cardiff) quoted
in MCN 23rd June 2004:
Professor Mervyn Stone (UCL) See...
http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/today/repor ... 0624.shtml
... Where the BBC are due to publish a report by Professor Mervyn
Stone including the quote above and much more information about speed
cameras and regression to the mean. Publication has been delayed.
Professor Stone's 11,000 word report is highly critical of the UK
speed camera programme.