RobinXe wrote:
Surely the only reliable statistic would be a comparison of KSI accidents before and after the introduction of 20mph limit in the same location.
Anything but that would be better probably.
RTTM is a really big effect. See
http://www.safespeed.org.uk/rttm.html
Safe Speed issued the following PR at 13:43:
PR423: The dangerous 20mph zone mystery
news: for immediate release
Safe Speed has today criticised Department for Transport and the Scottish
Executive for failing to consider figures that show 20mph speed limit zones
have crashes which are, on average, more dangerous than those in 30mph zones.
Official figures show that the likelihood of a casualty being fatally or
seriously injured in 2005 was:
11.85% in 20mph zones and
10.26% in 30mph zones
There are a range of possible explanations including:
* A greater proportion of 20mph zone crashes include vulnerable road users
* 20mph zones are created in places where dangers are greatest
* 20mph zones create an illusion of safety, where people take less care
* Some drivers in 20mph zones are so busy attempting to maintain 20mph that
they simply don't brake before impact, possibly because they are looking at
their speedos when something goes wrong.
* 20mph zones encourage drivers to actually travel at 20mph when 10 or 15mph
may have been a better choice.
Paul Smith, founder of the Safe Speed road safety campaign
(
www.safespeed.org.uk) said: "It isn't safe to continue to roll out 20mph zones
willy nilly until we have a proper understanding of the higher average crash
severity that they are associated with. As is common with modern road safety
interventions this has not been investigated - they do it because they believe
it should work."
"At first 20mph had to be 'self enforcing' with traffic calming measures used
to create an environment in which 20mph seemed like a natural speed. But since
then there has been 'mission creep' and 20mph zones are being installed widely
without such features."
"If drug companies behaved like this there would be a national outcry, but with
road safety everyone has an opinion. Far too often they claim that 'it's
obvious' that a given intervention should work. This cavalier attitude has
taken us from being the fastest improving country in Europe to the slowest
(in the EU15). Like drugs, road safety interventions come with side effects and
unintended consequences."
"The authorities continue to treat road safety as a problem of vehicle physics
when in fact it is a complex problem of human psychology."
"It's all very well citing examples of 'model' schemes, but with serious
anomalies appearing, the need for properly conducted randomised trials has
never been clearer."
"There's no indication that any of the 'speed kills' policies have made our
roads safer. Speed cameras, traffic calming, speed limit reductions and so on
have all been rolled out across the country with no significant reduction in
road deaths or road crash hospitalisations."
<ends>
Notes for editors
=================
Article in Today's 'Press and Journal':
http://www.thisisnorthscotland.co.uk/di ... K=16224177
&moduleName=InternalSearch&formname=sidebarsearch
or
http://tinyurl.com/yfpcjs
Official figures: RCGB 2005, table 13, last section, casualties:
20mph: (8+128)/1147 = 11.85%
30mph: (990+15,458)/160,342 = 10.26%