http://www.sundayherald.com/oped/opinio ... 93.0.0.phpSusan Flockhart wrote:
Motoring crime is still not taboo. Thanks for nothing Tufty
IT'S JUST after rush hour and the streets are eerily quiet. Suddenly, something remarkable happens. A large car veers slowly across the road and hits a lamppost, while its driver sits slumped - apparently unconscious - over the wheel. A few bypassers stop and stare. But one man knows what to do and within seconds he has opened the car door and hauled the comatose motorist onto the pavement. "Help me get him up!" he gasps, as he hauls the heavy figure into a sitting position. Someone suggests calling 999. "Are you mad?" barks our hero. "He's obviously drunk. He could lose his licence ..."
In the end, common sense prevails. The emergency services are called and the attending officers don't seem interested in criminal investigations. Instead, they are muttering ominously about diabetic coma - the alcoholic odour being a possible effect of ketones accumulating in the bloodstream.
These events happened a long time ago and I am ashamed to admit to having been one of the witless bystanders who hesitated before running to the nearest phone box. I never found out what happened to the driver, but his chances can't have been improved by that misguided attempt to save his licence, rather than his life.
It would be nice to think that such woeful ignorance wouldn't be tolerated today. After three decades of government campaigns, drink driving has supposedly become socially unacceptable (despite research showing that a third of middle-aged drivers still admit to sometimes motoring while over the limit), and I doubt whether anyone disagrees that departing Livingston chairman Angelo Massone got what he deserved when he was fined £800 and banned from driving for a year after being found slumped over his steering wheel, reeking of booze.
What, though, are we to make of the sentencing of Ian Shennan, the van driver who killed father-of-three Paul Anderson and his four-year-old granddaughter? Convicted of dangerous driving at Edinburgh's High Court, Shennan had his licence removed for five years and was sentenced to 28 months imprisonment: a term Anderson's widow considers grossly inadequate.
We don’t care enough about our children to enforce rules that are designed to keep them safe. In fact, our whole approach to child road safety is flawed
The bereaved, of course, can be forgiven for thinking any punishment is too small. And for his part, Shennan appears deeply contrite about what his defence lawyer called "a tragic error of judgment". So what would be gained from subjecting him, and others like him, to the kind of sentences that are routinely doled out to people who kill with fists, knives or guns?
Shennan didn't mean to kill and it could be argued that in making a botch-up of overtaking on the A9, he was no more wicked than any motorist who takes a calculated risk; Shennan was just unlucky enough not to get away with it. It's the "there but for the grace of God" argument, and it's the reason why motoring offences are routinely downgraded in this country. Simply put - most people drive and most drivers, at least occasionally, break the speed limit, talk on their mobiles or take their eye off the road to change radio stations. So what are we going to do: bang them all up?
Having seen the pictures of a distraught Shennan leaving court, I haven't the heart to bay for a throw-away-the-keys-style blood-letting. But I do think he should have lost his licence for good. The 59-year-old has plainly rescinded the right to be let loose on the roads, and while it's unlikely he'd ever take a stupid risk again, a signal needs to be sent out that motoring offences are not trivial; that, in fact, careless driving is an efficient method of killing people.
Speed wasn't involved in the Shennan case, but it's by far the most common contributory factor in fatal road accidents. Yet according to an RAC survey, 75% of motorists think speed cameras have more to do with raising money than saving lives. All this proves, of course, is that 75% of motorists are monumentally arrogant.
Most people seem to think that getting caught breaking the speed limit is akin to being rumbled for chewing gum at the back of the class, despite the glaring evidence to the contrary: a child hit at 40mph has a 90% chance of dying compared with just 3% at 20mph. What part of that statistic do people not understand?
On the evidence of the pathetic conviction rate for speeding offences, we don't care enough about our children to enforce rules that are designed to keep them safe. In fact, our whole approach to child road safety is flawed. And in my opinion, the blame lies squarely with Tufty the Squirrel.
Launched in 1961, the Tufty Club was an early road safety initiative which encouraged children to follow the example of a cute but impossibly goody-goody talking rodent. Tufty always did his kerb drill - unlike bad Willy Weasel, who, if memory serves, got knocked down in every single story because he was forever careering off the pavement on his tricycle or dashing recklessly across the road to the ice cream van.
At the risk of being strung up by the red squirrel protection league, I'd say Tufty and his pals have a lot to answer for. There's nothing wrong with road safety education, of course, but the problem is that by placing the emphasis on teaching them how to stay out of harm's way, these campaigns signalled that responsibility for keeping children safe lay with the children themselves, rather than the adults who designed the streets and drove the cars.
Instead of devising ways of keeping down traffic speeds, we have demonised two generations of Willy Weasels for having the cheek to behave like children, while tolerating juvenile nonsense from the so-called motorists' lobby. Listen to this from anti-speed camera group Safe Speed on the government's drive to cut residential speed limits to 20mph: "If you make drivers go at a speed where they are not comfortable, they will be distracted and inattentive and that is what causes accidents."
As National Road Victim Month gets underway, Safe Speed and their ilk should shut the hell up and allow local communities to make their case for getting their neighbourhoods into a twenty's plenty zone.
Where these limits have been introduced, child fatalities have plummeted by around 70%. Once again: what part of that statistic does Safe Speed not understand?
Well it depends which statistics you look at !
Depends on whether you look at trends or specific years.
All road users have to be responsible. Tufty is great for telling kids how to be responsible, it was not lets have tufty run all road safety - it was aimed at kids, for kids, and it worked very well. During that period were many public info films too on many road safety advice, by taking care and keeping your eyes on the road as well as seat belts a little later. Many messages for all road users, not just one area nor to one road user type, as we see with cameras.€
We encourage all people to drive at the right speed appropriate to conditions so that you an stop in the distance that you see to be 'clear' in. That means outside a school I may as I have said on BBC Radio 5 live - I would if it was busy be perhaps doing 5mph, or slower if it required. At 3 am I may be passing at 30mph though. Being responsible is the right attitude, and the right driving good behaviour.
She has not understood Safe Speed's
Kill Speed webpage, just to start with.
As for having our neighbours be the judges of Road Safety is extremely worrying - I hope they don't decide that my neighbour is to decide on health matters too ? Susan?
Safe Speed approves of proper enforcement and calls for the return of many more Traffic Cops.
Plymouth's original study showed that at 20mph KSI was 17% and at 30mph 13%.
Driving when going slower than is necessary become inattentive and frustrated, the two main causes of accidents.
It is the reduction of accidents that we need to see not an increase and we will I predict see a very sad increase in these zones.
Hopefully good understanding of Intelligent Road Safety will prevail and many will not reduce residential streets to 20mph zones.
The effect on the economy too will be significant esp if they do reduce London to 20mph!
On a personal note I have attended many road accidents and have never once failed to ensure upon arrival that the emergency services have been called or I have called them without hesitation.
Hauling someone from a vehicle is a really bad thing to do. If someone is driving with over the legal alcohol limit and have an accident their personal well being is the first priority, all else is second.
These Speed Cameras have divided the Police, public relationship, and I would put this squarely as the fault, when this person removed him from the vehicle with your reported intention of saving him from a police arrest !