First a request. Can the originator, or a Mod/Admin resize the photo.
http://bluefive.pair.com/pixresizer.htm does a good job.
ed_m wrote:
well a few times lately i've actually seen them dealing with incidents.
'Dealing' or 'Attending'? Or just relieving the boredom? Last Winter I was driving down the M6 in Staffs, in the dark, and, having passed a 'TIPPO' vehicle 'bimbling' along in Lane 1, suddenly Lane 3 slowed rapidly. The reason? A bump in Lane 3 on the opposite carriageway. HATO car consequently meanders ahead of me. Approaching the next junction Police and Fire vehicles join the other carriageway at speed. The reaction from the HATO vehicle? Well, they left on the exit slip, but I didn't recognise any signs of urgency.
Saying that, these people are not trained for 'response driving', except that a few may actually (as inferred above) have had many years of response driving experience.
As to the type of vehicles they use. The reason for a FWD is to be able to pull vehicles clear of the road. Certainly in the early days, before 'Spring Brakes' became commonplace. even a 30+ ton artic could be shifted by a Range Rover. Hook up the rope. Drain the trailer tank, and away it would go, even if, in the wet, the co-pilot had to stand on the front bumper to maintain traction.

I kid you not.
Unfortunately, that level of expertise seems to have been eroded.
For example, a few day ago, on the M40, at the bottom of 'Guano Gulch', there was a trailer on its side with the rear of the towing vehicle 'upended'. Going past, the trailer appeared to be on the hard shoulder, but the towing vehicle was across Lane 1. Simple. Handbrake on, Release the tow-hitch and move the towing vehicle. Except that it would probably have been 'crunched' by the trailer as it dropped. But that's not a problem. The 'stated case' under the Removal of Vehicles Act relates to the Aberfan disaster in..........(thinks) 1966, when one of the 'ghouls' left a brand new Rover 95? obstructing the road. The only way to remove it was to get a 'grab' to puncture the windows and lift it into a field. the Insurance company sued the Police and the claim was denied.
Being something of a dinosaur, I'm of the era where we DID help push start motorists with flat batteries in the Winter. Or helped people to change wheels when they had a puncture. But in the 1980's the rules changed. Six months off sick and one could expect only half pay. Twelve months off sick rendered one with no pay whatsoever. Although there was/is a certain latitude as to injuries received 'in the course of one's duties' the question as to whether helping a 'vulnerable' motorist to change a wheel, when the jack collapses, is regarded as 'duties' has yet to be answered. Even some quarter of a Century after the rule was introduced. It comes down to the question. "Do my allegiances lie with the public I serve, or to my wife and children?" No contest.
There is an old saying. "Society gets the Police Force it deserves." And whilst I sympathise with many of the criticisms directed against the Police on this forum, perhaps those criticisms should be better directed towards our Members of Parliament who, at the end of the day, introduce these rules/restrictions.
Rant over.
But more to follow.
