Linking back to the C+ discussion:
http://www.cyclingplus.co.uk/forum/topi ... ichpage=44Cunobelin on C+ wrote:
THis I can never understand -
What is wrong with targetting drivers?
If there is somewhere where drivers are breaking the law and you target that area, surely it is good practice?
To suggest that you should not put speed cameras or mobile units where the drivers are speeding is a bit like suggesting that Police with experience of serial killers shouldn't go near Ipswich!
This is what annoys me most with SafeSpeed and Press stories as above - why are we so against law enforcement?
It's fairly tragic that they form their opinions about us without having even the most basic understanding of our case. For the benefit of C+ readers and lurkers the answer is as follows:
There is absolutely nothing wrong with targetting drivers
who cause danger. That's what we want too.
But, and it's a very big but, any slice we take through the road safety data shows that there's an awful lot of 'speeding' out there that doesn't cause danger. One simple example is that DfT says that around 60% of vehicles are 'speeding' at sample sites, while only 5% of crashes involve a speeding vehicle.
Now the real road safety battleground is road users minds, and virtually nowhere else. Actions speak louder than words, and where it really matters - in the daily experience (and hence the minds) of road users - speed cameras are (say) 95% of the experience of road safety policy.
Thus speed cameras cause a gross distortion of safety priority in the minds of road users. Effectively we're misdirecting the most important road safety resource of all. By applying (say) 95% of the effort to 5% of the problem we're missing the opportunity to land resources on the real problems.
Road safety policy MUST be well aligned with real causes of danger, because when it isn't we squander life saving resources.
A lovely speech. That completely avoids the question.